Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, September 23, 1958, Page 1, Image 1

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    COJP
U OF OREGON LIBiURT
EUGENE, ORE.
la The-
Day'slews
By FRANK JENKINS
Sherman Adams, resigning 'his
position as first assistant to the
President, says he does so for
political reasons. He adds that in
making his decision one factor he
considered was whether staying on
in his high position "might possi
bly diminish the chances which
my party has of regaining control
ot congress in the November elec
tions." He charges that he has been
besieged by a campaign of vilifi
cation by those seeking to remove
him from public life and says it
is clear these efforts "have been
intended to destroy me and in so
doing to embarrass the adminis
tration and the President of the
United States."
He's right, of course, on both
points.
The vigor of the attack-on him
is for political purposes.
He is resigning in an effort to
soften the political consequences
of what he did.
That's the long and the short
of it.
Let's put it this way:
The attack on him has been
pretty rough.
But the Republicans weren't
gentle back in the mink coat days,
Politics is politics.
UPI's George Harder puts it
pretty well in a dispatch from
Washington today. He says:
"Politics is a ruthless business.
Its practitioners are not notable
for the quality of mercy. And so
it would be naive to presume that
the Democrats will let go of the
corruption issue because Sherman
Adams is no longer in the White
House. Politics being what it is
rough and tumble at best the
Democrats will now insist that
Adams' departure is a confession
of guilt.
"If you heard Adams on radio
and TV you know, of course, it
was nothing of the kind. Ethics
had nothing to do with Adams
leave - taking. Practical politics
had everything to do with it.
I doubt if anyone his political
opponents included thinks Sher
man Adams deliberately sold poll
tical influence for a few vicuna
coats and an occasional free,
loading stay at a luxury hotel.
But
As Caesar himself said a long
lime ago, "Caesar's wife must be
above suspicion." If you will con
sult your history books, you will
find that the circumstances were
surprisingly similar.
Back in those early centuries,
the name of Pompeia got mixed
up with an accusation against Fub-
lius Clodius, a Roman, Tribune of
the people. Caesar divorced her
notv he explained, because he
believed her quilty but because the:
wife of Caesar must not even be
suspected of wrongdoing.
Politics, you see, always has
been politics.
KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 23, 1958
Price Five Cents 18 Pages Telephone TU 4-8111
No. 6182
WEST SIDE BYPASS to Klamath Falls was in the actual construction stage when this
picture was taken Tuesday morning. After a number of years in the talking and planning
stage, work on grading and paving the approximate four mile stretch commenced Mon
day morning with the Rogers Construction Company of Portland doing the work for
$683,000, Cost of the bypass, including cloverleaf structures, has been estimated at
$1,843,000. Present work is being done on the hill area above Conger School where this
picture was taken.
Weather
FORECAST Klamath Falls
and vicinity: Fair through Wednes
day. General freeze tonight with
lows 22-28; high Wednesday 56-62.
High yesterday 49
Low last night 33
Preclp. last 24 hours 0.42
Since Oct. 1 20.58
Same period last year 15.26
Normal for period 13.35
Northern California: .. Fair
through Wednesday; warmer Wed
nesday. Coastal winds northwester
ly, 12-25 miles an hour.
BULLETIN
TUSTIN (UPD George L. Duff,
CO, today sun-ended to police
when he returned from a fishing
trip and was told by his wife that
Eureka authorities were seeking
him on a murder charge,
A stake out at bus stations fait
cd to trap Duff and detectives went
to his trailer home. The suspect's
wife said he had not arrived home
and the officers left.
Minutes later Duff arrived, and
when his wife told him about the
detectives he went immediately to
the police station to surrender.
(Earlier Story On Page 4)
C'EST LA VIE
HOLLYWOOD (AP) Vocalist
Loray White says she still loves
Sammy Davis Jr. but will sue him
for divorce. Miss White, married
to the bouncy singer-dancer for
nine months, said: "I guess he
isn't in love with me. I feel this
will be best for him and best for
me."
WASHINGTON (AP) The third
round of talks between the United
States and Red China at Warsaw
reportedly has brought no fresh
hope of a break in the Formosa
deadlock.
President Eisenhower and Sec
retary of State Dulles were ex
pected to review the critical situa
tion upon the President's return
today from his Newport, R.I., va
cation headquarters.
There is increasing concern that
unless there is a favorable break,
'Sir Lancelot1
Fails To Woo
His 'Guinevere
SAN RAFAEL, Calif. (AP) Sir
Lancelot's attempt to win back
Gwenivere failed Monday, despite
a white horse.
James C. Hamm and his wife,
Ruth, called each other Lancelot
and Gwenivere in the early days
of their marriage 20 years ago.
Mamm spells it that way in
stead of "Guinevere."
Mrs. Hamm filed for divorce
from the 42-year-old real estate
broker Sept. 2, leaving their home
at nearby Belvedere with their
two children.
Hamm rode a white horse down
the main street of this San Fran
cisco suburb and hitched it to a
narking meter while he entered
the Albert building to meet his
wife and her attorney.
The horse bore a cardboard
hicld reading: "Sir Lancelot's
white charger. Gwenivere, I love
you.
Gwenivere didn t see the wnile
charger she entered and left the
building by a rear door and she
went on to Superior Court and
asked for temporary alimony and
child support.
Lancelot wasn't so chivalrous
last July, she testified, saying he
kicked her in the stomach.
Judge N. Charles Brusatori
awarded her $375 a month and cus
tody of the children. Hamm tele
phoned the stable to come after
the horse.
Third Round Warsaw Talks
Fail To Terminate Crisis
It's Official:
Autumn Here
Three Terrorists Slain
In Duel With Paris Cops
PARIS (AP) Police today dis
covered a crude time bomb hid
den atop the famed Eiffel Tower
visited by thousands of tourists
annually.
. The bomb contained about five
pounds of dynamite, police said,
end was powerful enough to have
blown off the entire top frame
work which consists mainly of re
cently added television installa
tions.
The bomb was discovered as the
French police force redoubled ef
forts to stem the wave of Algerian
Nationalist terrorism sweeping
France on the eve of a new con
stitutional referendum asked by
Premier Charles do Gaulle.
Only this morning France's
worldwide airline, Air France, or
dered its representatives through
out the world to search all freight
put aboard its airliners to prevent
any possible saDotage.
the bomb was found in the pub
lic toilet at the top observation
platform of the famed structure
which is about l.ooo toct nign. ine
platform is about 100 feet from
the top of the tower.
Police said the bomb consisted
also of an electric battery and an
alarm clock. The device was set
for 7 o'clock, but the clock had
topped.
Police did not know if it had
rcn set to go off at 7 a.m., when
the platform would have been
empty, or 7 o'clock tonight when
it would have been crowded.
The bomb was immediately
brought down by special police
who were called in.
Earlier submachineguns chat
tered in a vacant lot in the Auber-
villiers section of Paris near the
municipal slaughterhouse.
Three Algerian terrorists who
opened fire on a police car were
making their last stand. The
gendarmes, including one whom
the Algerians wounded, tracked
them down.
Ten minutes later the three ter
rorists were dead.
At Metz in eastern France about
the same time, an Algerian fired
three bullets at a French noncom
missioned army officer.
The soldier crumpled into the
street, dead.
Across the Mediterranean In
war-weary Algeria, authorities
said French soldiers came across
the mass grave of between 400
and 500 Algerian nationalist reb
els.
An official French announce
ment last night said notes found
with the bodies proved they were
slain by their former comrades in
arms for threatening to abandon
the four-year-old rebellion. They
all belonged to a rebel unit led by
a Col. Amirouche, the French
said.
United Press International
Summery weather showed a re
luctance to leave Tuesday despite
the official arrival of autumn.
The season of the harvest moon.
flying footballs and falling leaves
made its entrance at 7:10 a m
standard time.
The Autumnal Equinox means
the. sun is directly over the equa
tor, splitting day and night exact
ly into 12 hours everywhere on
earth except at the poles.
The full moon known as the
harvest moon also will shine this
week, on Saturday. And, with
luck, sometime in October or
early November there will be
spell of warm, Indian summer
weather, coming after the sea
son's first killing frost.
There was no hint of frost in
the air Tuesday as overnight
readings got no lower than the
70s as far north as South Dakota
and Southern Minnesota.
The warm southerly winds
reached gusts of 20 to 30 miles
per hour over much of the plains
during the night.
The heaviest rain occurred in
the southwest desert region as
Monday's showers along the Gulf
Coast and lower Mississippi Val
ley diminished to a few scattered
sprinkles.
Heavy showers continued along
the Mexican border. Carlsbad
N.M., was doused with a 2.46-inch
downpour Monday night, and
Douglas, Ariz., recorded nearly
one-half inch.
Scattered showers also ranged
along a band of cooler air over
the Pacific Northwest and as far
south as Central California.
Sunny, warm weather is fore
cast for the first day of fall in
the Northeast while afternoon
readings climbed into the 80s and
90s southward through the South
Atlantic States. A few scattered
showers were expected in Florida
Scattered afternoon thunder
showers also were expected along
a front extending from Lake Su
perior southwestward into the
Southwest desert, the Central
Rockies and plains.
Dr. Martin King
Improves Rapidly
NEW YORK (AP)-The Rev,
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.,
stabbing victim, is recovering so
rapidly that his doctors today
permitted him to walk a short
distance, with assistance.
The Negro leader walked 30 feet
to a hospital room for an X-ray
examination. He was wheeled
back to his police-guarded room
His condition has been compli
cated by a touch of pneumonia
But doctors said it had been ex
pected and was nothing to worry
about.
King was allowed to sit up for
about an hour Monday night and
this morning he sat up for 20
minutes reading newspapers.
Presidential Aide
Gives Resignation
Red China's avowed determina
tion to take Chinese Nationalist
territory by force and drive U.S.
forces from the Formosa area
may lead to conflict.
U.S. Ambassador Jacob Ream
and Ambassador Wang Ping-nan
of Red China held their third ses-!
sion on the crisis in Warsaw yes
terday, it lasted 1 hours.
Diplomatic informants said that
Red China was standing firm on
its demand that the United States
agree to abandon Formosa. U.S.
officials said this was so complete
ly contrary to basic American
policy in the Far East as to be
entirely beyond serious considera
tion. . I. ,
The United State.?, for its part,
insisted again that the Reds agree
to a cease-fire that would halt
Iheir shelling of the Nationalist-
held island of Qucmoy.
Beam and Wang agreed to meet
again Thursday. Some officials
said that the United States would
not break off the talks as long as
the Reds want to continue them.
But reports persisted that if there
no progress in the next few
days the United States would take
the crisis to the United Nations.
One dangerous element in the
tuation as seen here is evidence
that Soviet Premier Nikita
Khrushchev is becoming extreme
ly confident and arrogant in his
attitude toward the United States
and other Western countries. If
this is true, 'the fear is that his
backing of Communist China may
not be restrained by careful judg
ments of United States intention
Without restraint on both sides
as the showdown develops, offi
cials said, the crisis could easily
explode into a war between Soviet
backed Red China and the United
States.
U.S. authorities still think this
will not happen. They estimate
that the Reds arc trying to break
down United states support of Na
tionalist China by threats of war.
But they concede that the essential
question is one of Soviet and Red
Chinese intentions and these are
unknown here except for what
Moscow and Peiping say about
them.
WASHINGTON (AP) - While
millions watched with varying re
actions, snerman Adams bowed
out last night as the man closest
to the throne in the Eisenhower
administration.
Still insisting "I have done no
wrong, the presidential assistant
yielded to renewed pressure from
Kepublican candidates and contin
uing criticism from Democrats of
his relations with Bernard Gold-
fine, the Boston millionaire and
long-time friend from whom he
acknowledged receiving gifts,
Announcing his resignation in a
I0-minute nationwide radio-TV ap
pearance, President Eisenhower s
top aide said, "I must give full
consideration to the effect of my
counting presence on the public
scene.
But political controversy boiled
unabated over the corruption is
sue, and much of the comment in
dicated a belief Adams had acted
too late to remove it from the
November election campaign.
Adams gave his listeners no hint
how quickly the "orderly process"
of his resignation would take him
from his watchdog quarters next
o Eisenhower s White House of
fice.
Neither was there any positive
indication from administration
sources about a successor who will
move into a spot from which his
political enemies often said Adams
was running the government.
In immediate speculation, how
ever, the name of Gen. Allrcd M.
Iruenther, president of the Ameri
can Red Cross, stood near the top.
Gruenther has served before as
Eisenhower's good right arm.
Eisenhower accepted Adams
resignation "with sadness," but
the President's chagrin. at Adams
self-imposed fadeout obviously
was not shared by Republican
congressional candidates. They
breathed sighs of relief.
Democrats made it clear
Adams' exit will not diminish their
gleeful attack on what they call
corruption within the Eisen
hower administration.
The Democrats asked for time
probably to be taken by National
Chairman' Paul M Butler to
reply to Adams's statement that
to stay on "might possibly
diminish the chances which my
party nas ot regaining control of
the Congress in the November
election."
Holding a manuscript loosely in
his hands between slanting micro
phones, Adams slowly and solemn
ly read his denial that he had
NEW YORK (AP) Demo
cratic National Chairniaa Paul
Butler will address the natin to
night on "the other side of the
Adams case." ?
The television and radio net
works had granted free lime to
Sherman Adams to announce his
resignation Monday night as as
sistant to the President. Butler
contended the announcement
was partisan and political and
asked equal time.
ever influenced or "attempted to
influence any agency, or any offi
cer or any employe of any agency
in any case, decision or matter
whatsoever."
Unmentioned in his simple.
forceful 750-word statement was
the name of Goldfino. Nor was
there any mention of Adams' re
peated calls to regulatory agen
cies considering cases involving
Uoldllne s companies.
He said nothing, either, about
his future plans when, at 59, he
steps from the $22,500-a-year post
he has held for nearly six years.
Licking his lips occasionally in
his only show of nervousness,
Adams said "a calculated and con
trived effort" had been made to
discredit him.
'A campaign of vilification by
those who seek personal ad
vantage by my removal from pub
lic Hie has continued up to this
very moment," he said, raising
his eyes to look squarely into the
television cameras. These ef
forts, it is now clear, have been
intended to destroy me and in so
doing to embarrass the adminis
tration and the President of the
United States."
Adams did not say who initiated
these attacks. Most of the de
mands for his resignation have
come from members of his own
party. Democrats generally have
remained silent on this aspect of
the controversy
Adams said it was' not his na
ture to run under fire. Neither, he
said, did he want to give any
grounds for substantiating the ac
cusations against him.
jT : ' t iKA ' X
s v ; ,wVk fixX
UUNITED FUND GOaUI'T
$150,000
United States Confident
Of Shelving Red Seating
New Missile Production
Cited By Rocket Expert
DETROIT (UPD The creator
of the famous German V2 rocket
says clusters of rockets producing
a million-pound thrust and capable
of boosting a one-ton or better
satellite into orbit is the answer
to the United States catching up
with the Soviet Union in space research.
Dr. Werner von Braun, research
director of development for the
Army's Ballistic Missile Agency
at Huntsvillc, Ala., told the De
troit Economic Club Monday de
velopment of a single first-stage
rocket engine able td produce a
million-pound thrust is' still sev
eral years away.
Space vehicles with clustered
rocket engines, he revealed, are
under construction.
'The time may come," Von
Braun said, "when solid fuels will
power intermediate range and in
tercontinental range ballistic mis-l
siles.
He said liquid fuels "will be
pushed into outer space to power
satellites.
The Russians still arc ahead of
us in the total amount of know!
edge gained from satellites, Von
Braun said, and "we must accel
erate the momentum of our de
velopment program in order to
overtake the initial advantage and
pull out well in front."
Von Braun said the last suc
cessful Russian satellite launch
ing, a 3,000-pound "moon," cap
ped a program under which the
Soviets have been able to put up
more research equipment than we
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP)
The United States felt confident
of easily shelving for another year
the Red China seating issue today
as tho General Assembly neared
a vote.
The prevote debate was marked
by a head-on clash between the
Soviet Union and the United States
on the Formosa Strait crisis.
U.S. Ambassador Henry Cabot
Lodge lashed back angrily after
Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei
Gromyko had accused the United
States of "playing with lire in the
Far East.
Lodge told the Assembly Gro-
myko's words "hardly become a
government with the brutal record
of the Soviet Union.
Tho Americans wore sure their
postponement motion would get 45
favorable votes and that not more
than 30 would be against.
Lodge angrily took the floor to
answer Gromyko after the Soviet
foreign minister had injected the
Formosa question into the repre
sentation debate. Lodge had ob
served Assembly rules in earlier
remarks and refrained trom en
gaging in broader issues connect
ed with the question.
Gromyko demanded that the
United States pull its military
forces from Formosa "while it is
not too late."
"How long," he said, "is the
being used as a tool of a policy of
interference in the internal attairs
of another country, the policy of
have read them is proof of that
fact," he said.
Lodge asserted that the Red
shelling of Quemoy had claimed
thousands of civilians' lives and
called on the Kremlin to persuade
Peiping to cease its policy of "vio
lence and murder."
He said the Red Chinese were
"rapidly shooting themselves and
tne rest of the world out of a
chance to settle the crisis over
Formosa.
China Leader,
Admiral Chat
TAIPEI, Formosa (AP) Presi
dent Chiang Kai-shek and Adm.
Harry D. Felt discussed the For
mosa Strait crisis today as the
Communist threat to the offshore
islands went into a second tense
month.
The President of Nationalist
China and the commander in chief
of U.S. forces in the Pacific were
believed to have considered ways
of getting more supplies to the
besieged Quemoys.
Continuing strong Nationalist
demands for U.S. support in aerial
attacks on the mainland gun posi-
United Nations going to tolerate tions presumably were voiced at
have been able to do In all our
firings to date, even discounting direct aggression pursued by the
uiv-iuvi mat luu u.o.o.iv. uiu jiul j united states"
miniaturise its equipment as we
nave done.
Car Industry
Waits Results
DETROIT (AP) The auto in
dustry waited today to see wheth
er Chrysler Corp. would reach
contract agreement with the
United Auto Workers or whether
it would await results of the UAW
Gcncral Motors negotiations.
UAW President Walter Reuther,
who has personally directed his
union's meetings with Chrysler
since Monday, told Chrysler Mon
day it had until noon Wednesday
to settle.
If no Chrysler agreement is
reached by that hour, Reuther
said he would "put the Chrysler
talks on the back burner and let
them simmer" while he turned
his entire attention to GM talks.
Reuthcr's auto workers have set
Sept. 30 as a strike date at GM
if no new contract is worked out
to replace the old three-year pact
that ran out Memorial Day week
end. They also plan to strike
Chrysler if contract talks fail, with
the strike date to be set by lieu
ther and his top aides. The union
settled with Ford last Wednesday
Ho charged that tho United
States had occupied Formosa and
had brought pressure on its allies
to keep Red China out of the U.N
Lodge retorted that Gromyko
had taken advantage of a chance
to launch a full-scale attack on
U.S. policy.
'What kind of game is he play
ing here?" he demanded.
We never interfere, we never
impose our will on another coun
try," he Said. "It ill becomes tho
Soviet Union with its record ot
slavery to make accusations
against us.
Lodge denied Gromyko s asser
tion that the United States was
provoking war in the Far East.
We arc seeking peace and
every single statement made by
President Eisenhower and you
Eisenhower
Back On Job
NEWPORT. R.I." (AP) Presi
dent Eisenhower ends a 25-day va
cation mixed with work today and
flies back to Washington to a big
job selection of a new chief aide.
The resignation of Sherman Ad
ams as Eisenhower's top assistant
No. 2 While House position I
leaves him without the man who
for more than six years has helped
ease the President's burden more
than any other official.
The few Eisenhower aides in
Newport said they had no infor
mation as to whom Eisenhower
will Dick to succeed Adams.
Despite the Adams problem, the
Far East crisis and the continu
ing school integration controversy
all of which flared with consid
erable intensity during the last
three weeks the President re
turns to Washington noticeably re
freshed.
Mai. Gen. Howard M. Snyder
tho White House physician, said
the Newport vacation did Eisen
hower much good.
The President got in 18 holes of
golf almost every day and he went
fishing three times.
On his return today he arranged
to honor the foreign minister of
20 Lalin-American nations at
White House stag luncheon.
He also planned conferences
with Secretary of Defense McEl
roy and Gen. Nathan F. Twining,
chairman of the Joint Chiefs ot
Staff.
the three-hour meeting. American
officers have restrained such ac
tion for fear of spreading the vest
pocket war." -- - . -
The Nationalists said another
supply convoy got through to Que
moy and more supplies were para
chuted to Little Quemoy. With the
Communist bombardment continu
ing, however, the supply situation
on the little islands remained
tight.
The Defense Ministry said tho
Communists hurled 5,831 shells at
the islands in the last six hours
yesterday, tho last day of a full
month s bombardment. Since Aug.
23, about 325,000 have been fired
the Nationalists estimated.
Tho Nationalists have reported
2H0 military casualties among the
100.000 soldiers on the Quemoys
plus 63 civilians killed and 159
wounded by shells.
The Defense Ministry claims i4
Communist MIG jet fighters shot
down plus 3 probables without the
loss of a Nationalist jet; and 7
Communist gunboats, 11 torpedo
boats and 8 motorized junks sunk
at the cost of 3 Nationalist landing
ships.
These figures were reviewed
here as Adm. Felt met with
Chiang in the President's Taipei
headquarters. Since the admiral's
arrival on Formosa Saturday for
a five-day visit, he has conferred
with the ranking U.S. officers hero
and with Nationalist military leaders.
TODAY. THE RED CROSS BLOODMOBILE arrives in Klamath Falls, and ,the OTI Owls
will do their bit to sea that the Basin makes a substantial contribution to the blood
bank. Jack Cumming, seated left, wat signing up Ardell Hamilton, and for the Owls, at
a registration stand specially sat up on the practice field, when this photo was shot. Rax
Hunsaker, kneeling, and George Miller, right, took time off from coaching to encourage
the donationt. Other donors should make appointments by phoning the Real Cross office,
TU 4-4125. The bloodmobile will accept donations from 4 to 8 p.m. today and from
10 a.m. oo 2 p.m. tomorrow, parked at the Veterans of Foreign Vr'tas GjpW, b I Sp itatBtih
Avenue.
a
t V
'I
UF-RC TOTAL TO DATE:
$64,652.79
Jews' Observing
Most Sacred Day
NEW YOKK (AP) Yom Kip
pur, the Day of Atonement and
the most sacred day of the Jewish
year, begins at sundown tonight.
The High Holy Day, which ends
at sundown Wednesday, will be ob
served by prayer and fasting.
Sundown Wednesday will con
elude the 10-day period of prayer
and repentence that began with
Rnsh llashana, the Jewish New
GO 57 H.
Bride Alters
Mind At Altar
MANILA (UPD The Rev.
Gregoria Binuya turned toward 17-ycar-old
Cecilia Camuya kneeling
Ix'side the nervous bridegroom be
lore the brightly lit altar today
and asked tho usual question.
"Do you. the priest asked,
"take this man to be your law
ful wedded husband?"
"No," Cecilia said rushing to
ward the church door.
"What's more," she told her
startled parents, "you can marry
this young man if you want to.
Cecilia left the church, hailed a
passing horse-driven rig and told
the driver to "please drive mo
home."
The bridegroom, Carllto Pineda,
was speechless.