COM? Im T1m Day's lews u o? or.sao.v liesart EUGENE, ORE. By FRANK JENKINS This piece is a brief account of a meeting in romand and the re turn therefrom. The purpose of the meetine was tn determine tha Ktta of the aDDrnnriatinn far tnnrict an. vertising of the state of Oregon for uie year iwy. The decision was to up the ap t)roDriation aDDrnxtmatplv n third to a total of $400,000. The reason tor me increase is that next year uregon s centennial year. Be cause Of that feint it Ufac felt that the prospect for bringing mure tourists 10 uregon is good. Hence the increase in the adver tising appropriation. Will it be possible to bring more tourists 10 uregon next year? It should be. For one thing, exposi tions 01VA npenle an evnca tn an e-. t r.w .... ...... ...... b somewhere. Everybody in this nioaern aay wan lb to travel, lilv en a good excuse, more people wil,u travel. Tourist travel in Oregon this year is up over last year. One reason is that more and better facilities for camping have been provided. Camping in Oreeon has been popular. The state parks where camping facilities have been provided have been well patron ized. In earlier years, it was felt that camping facilities in state parks amounted to unjustified com petition by the state with privately owned hotels and motels. It hasn't worked out that way. Experience has proved that after people have camped out for a week or two they like to get into hotels and motels to get cleaned up. Once they get there, they tend to stay longer than was formerly the case. Oregon's outdoor appeal is one ot its strongest attractions. Oregon's tourist advertising mon ey comes out of the gasoline tax. Perhaps, as a taxpayer, you may resent that. You shouldn't. Every year since the advertising was be gun the tourists have paid FAR more in gasoline tax than the ad vertising has cost. It has been a profitable enter prise. Besides, people who come to Oregon as tourists tend to re turn as permanent residents. The return from Portland was by a roundabout route over the Coast range to Tillamook and thence down the Coast highway. That route leads through the great Tillamook burn. The Tillamook burn provides a lot of lessons for all of us. Lesson No. 1 is a cruel one. Here, in a few tragic days, a re source that should have gone on creating wealth in perpetuity for the Tillamook area was DE STROYED. It was destroyed be cause a fire got. loose in the tim ber. By the time the fire was put out, damage that can never be ac curately computed had been done. Why can't it be computed? Well, for one thing, there were BENEFITS. The benefits were temporary, of course. They arose out of the necessity to SALVAGE the trees that had been killed. Out of these salvage operations there grew a BOOM in the produc tion of lumber. This boom pro duced WAGES. It produced a TEM PORARY rise in the economy of the areas where the lumber was cut. But this forced cutting of too much lumber in too short a period of time ROBBED the area of FU TURE development. You can see the results of this robbery in the Tillamook valley where lumber operations are now relatively few and far between. As a result, the economy of the Tillamook valley has been thrown OUT OF BAL ANCE. Because of the timber that was destroyed in that frightful hol ocaust, the rich and beautiful Tillamook valley is compelled to depend almost entirely on its agri culture, whereas if the timber had been kept green and growing there would now be a better BALANCE between industry and agriculture. That's something to think about every time you leave a campfire burning or toss away a match or a cigarette butt. The Tillamook valley, of course, Is still rich. It is still prosperous. Its dairy industry is a wonderful Industry. But it would have been RICH ER, it would have been MORE PROSPEROUS, if the great fire hadn't got loose. Here in the Klamath Basin, there is a thought for us in this Tillamook burn. The thought is this: We're LUCKY because the great pine forests of the Klamath In dian reservation have been kept under sustained yield. If they had been sold at auction to the highest bidder, WITHOUT sustained yield restrictions, they might have been cut off without provision for sys tematic growth and reproduction. In that event, our future would have been FAR LESS BRIGHT. We too would then have suffered from a LACK OF BALANCE in our economy. PUSHES NEW DEPARTMENT WASHINGTON (UPI) - Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey (D-Minn.) aaid today he will renew his ef forts in the next Congress to establish a Cabinet level De partment of Science. Bloodmobile The Red Cross Bloodmohile will be at the Veterans of For eign Want Club. 515 Klamath Avenue, Tuesday from ( lo I p.m. and Wednesday from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Donors should make appointments by phoning M Red Cross office, TU 4-4125. Price Five Cenjs 14 Page Many Nations Ask Assembly To Seat Reds UNITED NATIONS. N.Y. (AP) India and six other Asian-Af rican nations formally called on the U.N. General Assembly today to reverse a decision of the power ful Steering Committee and to consider the seating of Red China now. The 21-nation Steering Commit tee voted 12 to 7 last Friday in favor of a U.S. proposal to defer action on the Chinese representa tion question for at least a year, Debate on the Chinese problem was held up temporarily. The immediate issue was the Steering Committee's recommen dation that the Assembly bar un til next year any discussion of the seating of the Red China regime in the U. N. But many speakers were expect ed to bring up the clashes be tween the mainland forces and the U. S.-backed Chinese Nationalists holding the offshore islands and Formosa. Officials said the question of putting the seating of Red China on the agenda was not likely to come to a vote before tomorrow noon. A U. S. resolution endorsed by the 21-nation steering body Friday would have the Assembly: 1. Reject India's request that the agenda include the "Question of the Representation of China in the United Nations." 2. Decide not to consider at this session any proposal to exclude Chinese Nationalist or seat Chi nese Communist representatives. U. S. informants conceded that this year's resolution would get a little less than last year's vote of 47-7 with 7 abstentions. 2 Companies Facing Strike DETROIT (AP) -The United Auto Workers Union with a strike threat poised over General Motors and Chrysler, today resumes ef forts to have the two companies sweeten their contract offers and avert a walkout. GM and Chrysler offered to the UAW Saturday three-year con tracts almost identical to the one which Ford and the UAW agreed on Wednesday. UAW President Walter Reuther said he would not accept from GM or Chrysler a carbon copy of the Ford settlement, but he indicated the offer made Saturday supplied a basis from which to work for ultimate settlement. The UAW has an 11 a.m. Sept. 30 strike deadline at GM if no con tract agreement is reached. Reuth er and other top officers of the UAW have been given authority by the union to call a Chrysler strike whenever they feel if neces sary. Reuther said that since GM has four times as many plants and nearly four times as many work ers as Chrysler there are many more local problems at GM and that makes negotiation a slower process. Reuther and his top aides at the GM negotiations made it plain that one of their principal objec tives would be the correction of what they called wage inequities of GM workers doing the same jobs in plants less than 100 miles apart. The UAW says that in some of these cases workers in cities less than 50 miles apart have a wage difference of 10 cents an hour. : fir n METER MAIDS who will soon talta over patrol of tha city's parking meters war in Port land recently for additional training. They ars shown hare as they visited the studios of KGW and demonttrated soma of tha Instruction they wera receiving. Far left is instruc tor, unidentified. Others, left to right, are Betty Daniel, Betty Schuldheiu, Peggy Glass cock and Doris York. Far right it unidentified trainea for the Portland Meter Maids. It was expected th Klamath Falls trainees would begin operation ai soon as their uniforms arrive. KLAMATH Weather FORECAST Klamath.. FaUs and vicinity: Freeze warning. Cooler tonight with low 25-30. Mostly sunny Tuesday, high 62-68. High yesterday 62 Low last night 46 Preclp. last 24 hours 0 Since Oct. 1 .: 20.16 Normal for period 15.26 Same period last year 13.33 Northern California: A few high clouds tonight, clearing Tuesday, cooler. Coastal winds northwest erly to -westerly, 10-20 miles an hour. Five Day Forecasts Eastern Oregon: Temperatures averaging near or slightly below normal. Maximum temperatures mostly In the 60s and the mini mums In the 30s or low 40s, ris ing 10 degrees the latter half of the week. Little or no precipita tion. Reject Note Ires Kremlin MOSCOW (AP)-The Kremlin reacted sharply today to Presi dent Eisenhower's rejection of Premier Khrushchev's warning on the Far East crisis. It said the rejection shows American author ities don't want to "listen to the voice of reason." The abrupt return of the Khru shchev note was held to show that American circles give little con sideration to "popular demand for putting an end to the policy of saber rattling which is carrying the world to the brink of war. Diplomatic observers comment ed that shortened tempers in both camps threatened to plunge So viet-American relations to a new low. The Soviet government issued its criticism through the official Tass news agency after Khru shchev's Sept. 19 note labeled un acceptable at the White House be cause of its strong terms was turned back to the Foreign Min istry by a U. S. Embassy 'mes senger. Khrushchev had warned Eisen hower to withdraw U. S. forces from Formosa immediately or risk their forceful expulsion by Red China. He called for Ameri can recognition of the Peiping re gime. (Moscow radio quoted today s edition of the Communist party newspaper Pravda as saying re jection of the Khrushchev note was "a violation of the generally accepted rules" of diplomatic re-, lations. "The organizers of mili tary provocation could not help seeing the tremendous influence this document (the .Khrushchev letter) had on the minds of men," Pravda added. (Pravda said ruling American Circles were "particularly an noyed" because Khrushchev had declared the United States would have to get out of Formosa and the olfshore islands or be driven put by the Red Chinese. c Whether they line u or not, however, the aggressors really will have to get out of the Tai wan Strait area of their own free will or else they will be made to get out, the paper declared.) The rejection, which the White House based on consideration that the note was intemperate, abusive and personally insulting to the President, also drew a denuncia tion from Red China. A New China News Agency dis patch broadcast by Radio Peiping said: Obviously tne u. !. pres ident, unable to explain away the facts and truth stated in Khru shchev's letter, disregarded all in ternational courtesy by restortmg to the unscrupulous act of refus ing to accept the message. is ft V FALLS, OREGON, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 22. 1958 Television Speech Planned By Mams NEWPORT. R.I. (AP) Sher man Adams will make a nation wide television-radio address to night from Washington to an nounce whether he is going to re sign or stay as President Eisen hower's chief aide. The announcement of Adams' plans came after he held a dra matic surprise conference with Ei senhower at the summer White House. Reports circulated that Adams was bowing to Republican clamor and had resigned, but neither Adams himself nor James C. Hagerty, Eisenhower's press sec retary, would say. the wiry, 59-year-old Adams walked off without a word when newsmen asked whether he had quit. Earlier, on his arrival from Washington. Adams said onlv "I have no statement" when asked whether he was in Newport to re sign. Adams conferred alone with Ei senhower for about an hour, then apparently saw him at least nnce more before flying back to Wash ington for toniEht s TV-radio ad- dress. Asked whether that in that ad dress Adams will disclose whether he plans to quit or stav. Haser- ty replied that is the case. - Hagerty said details had not been worked out yet on the time of Adams talk, or with respect to which networks will carry it. Eisenhower walked with Adams to the helicopter when the White House aide left the summer White House at 11:10 a.m. for the re turn trip to Washington. this was an obvious and ner- haps farewell gesture of regard for Adams. The two men were silent for the first few steps down the side walk toward the big Marine 'cop ter. Then they began conversing as they walked, and Eisenhower gave the departing Adams a. friendly pat on the aim Just before Adams climbed aboard. Some Republican candidates Top U.S. Pacific Chiefs Confer With Nationalists TAIPEI IB America's top fic commanders conferred with Chinese Nationalist military lead ers on the olfshore island crisis today. There was a blackout of news from shell-battered Quemoy. There was no information on Communist bombardment of the offshore islands beyond the Na tionalist Defense Ministry's shell count. It said 15,500 shells bat tered Quemoy and its little sister islands from Saturday midnient through 6 p.m. Sunday, and that 1,824 more landed on little Quemoy and the Tan Islets in six hours ending at noon today. A Nationalist convoy landed sup plies on Quemoy beach Sunday lor the eighth successive dpy, the ministry said. But it did not dis close the number of ships nor volume of material landed. It was assumed the Reds main tained the barrage they have con tinued almost without letup since August 23. Gen. Laurence S. Kuter, com mander of all U. S. Air Forces in the Pacific, flew in from Okinawa and entered into strategy meet ings with Adm. Harry Felt, U.S. commander of all forces in the ! X IB ; III SHERMAN ADAMS and party leaders have been de manding that Eisenhower get rid of Adams because of his relations with Boston industrialist Bernard Goldfine. Indications were he spent about an hour with the President. He may have seen Eisenhower again later. White House press secretary James C. Hagerty said "I don't know" when asked if Adams was about to step out as the president's chief assistant as a result of his accepting expensive favors from Boston industrialist Bernard Gold fine. Many Republicans have con tended that Adams continued presence on the White House staff would be a liability to GOP candi dates in the November election. Adams flew from Washington this morning to Quonset Point, R. I., across Narragansett Bay from the President's vacation headquarters then he switched to a wailing "copter tor the snort hop across tha bay. The 59-year-old Adams has ac knowledged accepting expensive gills and favors from Goldfine at Paci-IPacific; Vice Adm. Roland N. pmoot, laiwan l-ormosa delense commander; Maj. Gen. Thomas Moorman, 13th Air Force com mander from the Philippines, and other U.S. military men here. The high brass also went into closed session with U.S. Ambas sador Everett Drumright, then with Gen. "Tiger" Wang Shuming, Nationalist chief of staff and De fense Minister Yu Ta-weia. Absent from the parleys was Vice Adm. Wallace M. Bcakley, commander of all the U.S. 7th Fleet guarding Formosa Strait. Beakley came into Taipc! brief ly, but sailed aboard his flagship, the heavy cruiser Helena, for an unknown destination, U.S. mibtary spokesman declined to give further details. Kuter told newsmen he would discuss the Quemoy artillery block ade. U.S. warships and planes often protect Nationalist supply, convoys to the limit of Interna tional waters and international air space. The Nationalist claimed they sank one Red gunboat and heavi ly damaged a second, without filt ering any losses of their own, in a naval battle with six Red ves sels off Matsu, 150 miles north of Quemoy, colore dawn yesterday. The Nationalists said they de stroyed nine1 Communist artillery pieces and three empla-vrnents on the mainland from Quemoy Sat urday. Two Rivers Flood In Mexico State MEXICO CITY (AP)-Tho Silao and Lajas rivers flooded eight more small towns in Guanajuato state, central Mexico, dispatches from the area reported today. More than 10,000 persons were reported driven from their homes. About 15.000 persons already had been forced to flee as a result of high water at Salamanca in the central part of the state. Many other towns in the state already have been stricken. Heavy rains continued to fall in the area and in northern Mexico. China Paper Criticizes Ban TAIEPI, Formosa (AP) - The independent China News today s h a r 8 I y . criticized Nationalist China s banning of NBC corre spondent James Robinson, calling it m-aoviseo ana ill-timed. The Foreign Ministry an nounced Friday it was cancelling Robinson's visa because of "blas phemous" remarks made about President Chiang Kai-shek and the Nationalist government In a receni ivbl. television interview. Telephone TU 4-8111 No. 6181 a time the wealthy industrialist's firms were in trouble before fed eral regulatory agencies. But Adams also has denied he ever exerted an influence in be half of Goldfine. He said he made only routine inquiries. Hagerty and half a dozen news men were waiting for him on the lawn in front of the U.S. naval base administration building to day as the whirlybird put down near the water's edge. Eisenhower arrived at his oltice just five minutes before Adams stepped from the Marine helicop ter. Presumably Eisenhower and Adams met at once. Three months ago, when the controversy over Adams first flared, Eisenhower flatly rejected demands he get rid of his top aide. Negro Leader Still Critical . NEW YORK (AP)-The Re Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. re mained on the critical list at Har lem Hospital today. He faces three months of convalescence from a stabbing by an apparently mentally unbalanced woman. His assailant, Mrs. Isola Ware Curry, 42, Negro, is undergoing mental observation at Bellevue Hospital. Mrs. Curry plunged a seven-i inch steel letter opener into King's chest Saturday in a Harlem de partment store as the 29-year-old Negro leader in the Southern struggle for integration was auto graphing copies ot his dook Stride Toward Freedom. Dr. Aubre Maynard, Harlem HosDital surgeon who removed the letter onener trom Kins s cnest during a delicate four-noiw pw ation. said Kine's condition was satisfactory but that ne would be kept on the critical list for a day or two. After the operation, Maynard said the letter opener had just missed King s aorta, the bodys major artery. If the aorta had been cut. Maynard said, instant death would have resulted. The only visitor permitted at King s bedside yesterday was his wife Coretta, who arrived by plane from Montgomery, Ala. King is pastor of a Baptist cnurcn in Montgomery, where his leadership of the 1956 Negro boycott propelled him into the front ranks of . the forces for integration Mrs. Curry was ordered to Bellevue Hospital after her ar raignment before Magistrate Vin cent P. Rao on charges of feloni ous assault and violation of the antiweapons law. A loaded pistol was found in her clothing after the assault on King. I understand this Is the woman who is accused of stabbing the Rev. Mr. King with a knife," Rao said. No, it was a letter opener," shouted Mrs. Curry. She later interrupted the ar raignment proceedings by yelling, 1 m charging him as well as he a charging me." I m charging him with being mixed up with the Communists," she told Rao, and added: "I've reported the case to the FBI and its being looked into." this woman Is ill, Rao said as he ordered her taken to Belle vue. 8 Negro Return By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Eight Negroes returned to class es in Van uuren (Ark-) High School Monday with only mild demonstrations from whito stu dents who had threatened to walk out. Four other Negroes returned to classes at the nearby junior high school without incident. The Negroes had stayed away from school since Sept. 5 when white students gathered in front of the high school and threatened to remove them by force if they did not leave voluntarily. The new integration effort came after U.S. Dist. Judge John E. Miller of Fort Smith assured Ne groes and the school board they could ask his help if trouble threatened. Some white boys who had threat ened to boycott classes Monday if the Negroes entered, Joined other students In the building when the bell rang. In Little Rock, where high schools were closed to prevent integration, pupils studied lessons on television. Some Virginia towns where schools were closed con sidered setting up temporary faci lities. More than 6.000 pupils In the two states were affected by or fjglUNITED FUNDGOfl1 ;?u3 $150,000 lJ V:m,. my 4f Two Die, Scores Hurt In Headon Train Wreck BROOMFIELD, Colo. (UPI) I 51-car freight train slammed headon into a passenger train at the Broomficld station, just north west of Denver, today. Two crewmen on the passengerl train were killed and at least 17 others, 15 of them passengers, were injured. The Colorado and Southern Rail road, which owned both trains, identified the dead as S. W. John son and P. J. Loughry, both of Denver, who were engineer and fireman on the passenger train. Another trainman, Fred M. Tin gle, engineer of the freight, was KF Resident Grid Winner Enthusiastic football fans re- sponded in a big way last week to the first in a series of 10 contests running currently in the Herald and News, sponsored by mer chants in this area. Scores were relatively low, how ever, as this seems to be a week of upsets. The game most often missed was the one between Texas A&M and Texas Tech. It's inter- esunz 10 note mat most or me - i entries- Deuevea.iv.una was in tor a shellacking, but the Pels proved Ihem wrong. A point that should be made is that there were no fictitious games listed in this contest, (blipper Rock Teachers College, for instance, was whimsically listed by one con testant as a slippery ques tion??). The game between Bradley and Butler was not played for some reason unknown either by the Her. aid and News or wire services, and was not graded in the final tabulations. Results were as fol lows: First prize. $10 Harold Diehl, 1736 Laurel Street, Klamath Falls, missed five games, off 12 points. Second prize, $5 Harold Diehl, missed five games, off 18 points. Third prize. $2.50 Robert Wil son, Box 123, Merrill, missed five games, off 45 points. Honorable mentions went to Ted Hauser, 1610 Patterson Street, Klamath Falls, missed six games, off 19 points; and Virgil Barron, Box 476, Tulelake, missed seven games, off 3 points. Grand prize for the season Is two tickets to the Shrine East- West game plus $30 expense mon ey. Winners may pick up their checks at the Herald and News switchboard. RENTS ARE HIGH NEW YORK (UPI) The aver-! age three - room apartment in new buildings in Manhattan rents for $184 a month, the City ianning Commission said Sun day. Elsewhere in the city rental for a similar apartment is $151. Students To Class ders closing some of the schools. Indications were an additional 10, ooo would be idled at Norfolk next week. Eleven Negroes were enrolled at Van Buren High five at Van Burcn Junior High. They have not been present since Sept. 5, how ever, when some 4b whito young sters boycotted integrated classes at the high school. The Negroes stayed away and the boycott soon ended. The decision to return was tak en after U. S. Dist. Judge John E. Miller declined to order the school board to resume integra tion. He indicated such an order was unnecessary and that the Ne groes could go back without it. At the same time he assured all concerned they could seek further action from him if difficulty arose. At Lexington. Ky., Theodore R. McKcldin, pro-Integration gover nor ol Maryland suggested the Southern Governors Conference snould go on record as favoring desegregation in public class rooms. "If the resolution passed," he said, "it would show that wo of the South recognize the Constitu tion as the supreme law of the lani." taken to Bo-ilder Community Hos pital in critical condition. The locomotive of tha freiehl piled on top of the passenger lo comotive on impact directly in. front of the Broomfield station. Crews using crowbars and blow torches removed the bodv nf Loughry from the wreckage. But Johnson's body was still pinned in the locomotive nearly two hours atter tne collision occurred, at 47 a.m. p.d.t. Railroad officials said a crane was en route to the scene to re move the wreckage and that John. son's body likely would not ba re moved until after the crane ar rived. Witnesses at the station estimat. cd that the freight, bound from uenver to Billings, Mont., was traveling between 40-50 miles an hour when it smashed into the passenger train which had slowed to about 20 miles an hour to make a mail drop. A spokesman said there is no automatic switch at the Broom- field cutoff and that the passenger train had the right of way. Offi cials said the freight was supposed 10 nave swucned to a siding to let tne passenger train through on tha main line but for some reason the switch was not made. The less seriously injured Ipelud ed four - other trainmen and U passengers, all of whom were ri ding in the single coach in tha eight-car passenger train. The oth er cars were a Pullman and six baggage units. Local Firms Fill UF Quota 'Oscars" have been presented to 15 firms that have reported approximately 75 oer cent of em. ployes giving fair share to this year's United Fund Red Cross campaign drive. Those firms receiving the initial series of oscars were: 1. Car-Ad-Co 2. Klamath Lumber Ic Box 3. Modoc Lumber 4. Klamath Millwork and Supply 5. Mouldingcraft 6. Swan Lake Moulding 7. 0.C.4E. 8. United Air Lines 9. California Oregon Power Com pany 10. Oregon Water Corporation 11. Mack's Klamath Flower Shop 12. Fluhrer's Bakery 13. Klamath Falls Creamery 14. Medo-Land Creamery 15. First National Bank 1 C 4 . S UF-RC TOTAL TO DATE: $58,732.89 French Commies Win Moscow Aid PARIS (AP) French Commu nists have won direct support from Nikita Khrushchev in their campaign against Premier da Gaulle's proposals for a new French constitution. Tho Soviet Premier-party boss professed in a declaration broad cast Sunday by Radio Moscow to see the danger of a Fascist dictatorship arising from the move to strengthen France's govern ments. His blast came as Do Gaulle slumped eastern and northern provinces on behalf of the consti tution, up for a vote Sunday Thero was scattered violence sta widely separated areas.