Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, May 28, 1959, Page 2, Image 2

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    f AGE 2 A
HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH TALIS. OREGON
TIR'RSPAY. MAY 23. 1359
Massive Official Rites Mark Funeral Of Dulles
WASHINGTON AP)-The body
f John Foster Dulles was laid in
iu final resting place Wednesday
in massive official ceremony
seldom matched in the history of
this country.
Hundreds of U.S. officials and
many from abroad watched as
Dulles' casket was committed to
a simple (rave on a hillock in
quiet Arlington National Ceme
tery. A J'j-hour ritual was climaxed
by a 19-gun salute, three rifle vol
leys, and the sounding of taps by
a lon bugler. Dry-eyed and com
posed, Mrs. Dulles received the
flag which hsd covered the casket
during the funeral.
Record In Tact;
Ballot Is Cast
LOS ANGELES IAPI Arthur J.
Ringer hadn't missed voting in a
city election for IS yean, and he
wasn't going to let a little thing
like jury duty spoil his record.
A busload of jurors drove up
Tuesday to Ringer's borne, a pre
cinct polling place.
He cast his ballot without talk
ing to anyone. Then the jurors
drove off to eat dinner and re
sume deliberations in a drug theft
ease which already had lasted
five days.
A forlorn spectator was Ring
er's wife, Lee. She could only
stand and watch.
Kirby Renoir
$6.50 for labor, plus parts
1 Yr. guarantee Free estimates
Dean's Stark's
Vacuum Cleaner Seles
122 S. th TU 4.7 1M
Then President and Mrs I."isen-
hewer once azain expressed con
dolences to Mrs. Dulles, whose
husband died of - cancer Sunday
after six years as secretary of
state.
Today the gala.jr of
leaders including some
icemen on foot, the cortege moved
Nixon sat under a canopy by the
grave. Others remained standing
lo the rear, sweltering under an
80-degree May sun.
Eisenhower sat stiffly and sol
emnly through the reading of
passages from the Bible. Mrs. Dul
les remained calm.
Then came the firing of arms.
q mcinriB m lsuui-s family inj':iiv uir luiuuig in i.jie
a lew utiicia. iiiiiuuiiia ricsNnnnoHn IlaS al,u uojiuiiig uj uic
at slow pace through the ceme
tery s winding roads.
At the grave site on a hillside
partly shaded by a yellow poplar
tree hundreds more gathered to
foreign ! witness the final military rites.
u h, Dulles was a major in World
fminhl n,,ll' Arina hit Inn Atn- War 1.
Inmalie rrr nreoared lo eo Members of Dulles'
(heir separate ways.
1 1 .. L";..U. A - .... . 1. .... .4 TU.
Zm.--rmZ1T.1 President and Mr,. Richard M.'to Dulles had come to an end
Selwyn Lloyd, French Foreign
Minister Maurice Couve de Mur-
ille and Soviet Foreign Minister
Andrei Gromyko, scheduled a
meeting with Eisenhower before
returning to their Geneva confer
ence temporarily recessed for the
lunerai.
Germany's Chancellor Konrad
Adenauer, diplomatic representa
tives from 86 countries, and Wash
ington s elite from the administra
tion. Congress and the Supreme
Court joined in the elaborate pro
ceedings which started in the Na
tional Cathedral and moved to the
cemetery in a loo-limousine cor
tege.
The cathedral a huge. Gothic
church atop a Washington high
point was filled with nearly 3. duo
mourners for the Presbyterian fu
neral service led by the Rev. Dr.
Russell P. Barnes, Secretary of
the World Council of Churches
Dulles had been a Presbyterian
lay leader.
At Mrs. Dulles' request there
was no sermon and no eulogy.
At the cemetery gate there was
another solemn service. While the
procession waited, an Army band
played "God of Our Fathers" and
six servicemen moved the casket
from the motor hearse lo a black
caisson drawn by six gray horses.
Led now by companies of serv.
Rocket Bases In Albania,
Bulgaria, Slated By Reds
MOSCOW (AP'-Nikita Khrush
chev says the Soviet Lmon is
ready to set up rocket bases in
Albania and Bulgaria to match
any the United States may 'estab
lish in Italy or Greece.
The Soviet premier, visiting Al
bania, repeated an earlier Soviet
proposal for a ban on nuclear
weapons in the Balkan peninsula
to make it "a peninsula of peace
without any missiles or nuclear
weapons."
He warned Italy and Greece
that U.S. rocket bases on their
territory "will attract our rockets
as a magnet.
"These bases are clearly spear
headed against the Soviet Union,
against Albania and other Socialist
i Communist i countries," he said
in a speech Tuesday in Tirana,
the Albanian capital. His remarks
were reported by Tass, the Soviet
news agency.
If Italy and Greece go ahead
with NATO plans to locate bases
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If!
for American-supplied missiles on
their territory. Khrushchev de
clared, "it will compel us to build
up forces for a worthy reply."
"Perhaps." he said, "we shall
have to reach agreement with the
government of the People s Re
public of Albania to put something
nere to counter mem.
Albania has a common frontier
with Greece and is only 100 or
so mues across the Adriatic from
Italy. The Italians have agreed
to accept American intermediate
range missiles which can carry
nuclear warheads and are expect
ea to oegin gettins them by early
July.
mere nas oeen no word of a
similar agreement between the
United States and Greece, al
though the two nations have
agreed the Greek army will get
American training in the use o!
nuclear weapons.
The Soviet Union,' said Khrush
chev, could establish bases fc
intermediate and even close-range
missiles in neighboring satellites
mat could blanket both Italy
and orecce.
"Now there are missiles whicn
strike targets not hundreds but
thousands of kilometers away," he
continued. "As to locations to in
stall these rockets, we have a
wide choice in the matter."
Khrushchev tempered his warn
ings with the declaration "We
consider the international situa
tion is not a bad one. One might
even say it is good.
We are fully confident, mean
ing the Soviet Union, he said.
that by following correct policy
it is possible to do away with
armed conflicts.
But Khrushchev said the West
ern proposals at the Geneva for
eign ministers conference "offer
no basis for agreement.
Once again the Soviet premier
plumped for a summit meeting
and said it was immaterial to him
where it was held.
"To us the main point is that
the meeting be useful and that
world peace be consolidated." he
said lo achieve this end we are
ready to go to the end of the
eartn. .
nnrusncnev injected a tr bute to
John Foster Dulles in his speech,
calling him a "distinguished poli
tician ano expressing sincere
condolences on his death.
Demo Revolt
Threatens
Farm Bills
WASHivnrnv idis . i.
among potent House Democrats
against mounting farm subsidv
costs threatened today to delay
indefinitely House action on pend
inn new aencunttrai M.miattnn
The uprising developed in the
House Rlllpa rnmrnillu .kit.
has the power frequently exer-
cieo 10 oiock House considera
tion of virtually any piece of im
portant legislation.
Caught in the threatened block
ade were two major farm bills
atmrnved hv fh Unit. a i
lure Committee and ready for
House action.
One would increase the govern
ment price support level for small
vesiocK leen o-raina nrh
rye, barley and grain sorghums
ine diner, reoarfltvi a a
farm measure, would attempt to
stem the costly and mounting
wheat surplus by raising price
supports in return for reduced
plantings.
The Rules Commitiitoa aiiitiin
appeared lo make certain contin
uance oi a wheat program under
the Drespnt law fnr nnnlhmr ,.,..
Secretary nf Aorirnltitra Fr T-f.
Benson is rcauired to announce
marketing quotas and acreage al
lotments for the 10 wheat crop
not later than Monday.
There remained a possibility
mat ii congress were to chance
the law within 10 more days, the
cnances could he maHa In affair
next year's crop. But the Agricul
ture Department would need all
the time beyond that to prepare
for a .llllv 1 rafi-n4um n am ..
the farmers.
Chairman Harold D. Cooley D
NC of the House Agriculture
Committee aait that Aniim ik.
delay he would push for House
action on nis committee s bill. He
expressed hope a House vote can
ne set lor nevt 1 hnrH j
But Rules Committee artinn ha
been put off at least until next
week.
Reports that farm lreilatinn la
in trouble in the House r ran.
firmed by Reps. Richard Boiling
'u-mo ana Thomas P. O Neill
Jr. iD-Massi both Rules Commit
tee members.
DOWN THE HATCH
5 A YT. CRIZ. Calif. UTlt-
Coast Guardsmen responded to
the alarm of Floyd Leeka when
he radioed his salmon boat was
sinking. Tliey said he only thought
so because he couldn't stand up
on the deck.
Leeka was arrested for drunken
boat driving, and the boat was
towad la port.
"DENNIS THE MENACE"
lOTSA (5000 TRADiM' STUFF UEffE."
New Satellite Evidence
Indicates Equator Bulge
WASHINGTON API-New evi-:
dence from the Vanguard 1 satel
lite indicates a bulge around the
earth's equator may be about 500
feet thicker than had been
believed.
Dr. John P. Hagen, director of
the Vanguard project, reported
this today. He said the finding
may necessitate revisions in one
of the major theories dealing with
the earth's internal structure.
Before the new information,
the equatorial bulge, was believed
to measure about 13 miles.
Hagen said the new data should
not be confused with a previously
announced geodetic finding made
possible by Vanguard that the
earth more closely resembles a
pear in shape, rather than a
sphere.
Hagen, now associated with the
National, Aeronautics and Space
Administration, told about, the
bulge in an interview expanding
on a brief reference he made to
it Wednesday in a talk to
the National Missile Industry
Conference.
The new evidence about the
Bulge, he said, comes from -ob
servations of slight variations in
Vanguard's orbit. Indicating that
these variations are due to
changes in the earth's gravita
tional pull at various points
pecially at the equatorial bulge
Hagen said Vanguard had thus
produced the first very satis
factory measurements of " these
variations.
He said old theories on the bulge
ara based on the "hyrrostatic
equilibrium concept of the earth
This concept 'holds that the earth's
core is molten and is surrounded
by a flexible mantle hundreds of
miles thick. The spin of the earth.
according to this theory, causes
the mantle to push upward the
surface layers of the earth s crust
as the earth spins.
But Hagen said the equatorial
fatness indicated by Vanguard is
considerably more than could be
accounted for by the old concept
Although there is no agreement.
among experts, Hagen said
more plausible explanation is that
such a bulge developed eons ago
from the earth's spin, and that
the mantle since has hardened
and held the bulging shape.
Minnesotan Who Vanished,
Ready To Start Life Anew
SILVER LAKE. Minn- (AP
Earl Zrust, whose yearning to get
away from it all set off a nation
wide search, is back home and
ready to get back in business.
"I started 13 years ago with
nothing, and I guess I'm going lo
lave to start from scratch again,
he said.
Zrust. 30. disappeared with his
wife and five children last Decem
ber and was missing until three
weeks ago when he was located
working as a bricklayer in Keno,
Nev.
He said he hopes to start several
masonry projects next week in the
area, but won't get back into the
Homebuilding business he left ab
ruptly five months ago.
Since his return to his home
town, Zrust has been busy with
his attorney trying to straighten
out the financial tangle tliat re
sulted from his unannounced departure.
While his disappearance
caused a lot of anxiety and some
inconvenience, it didn't really hurt
anyone." said Joe Geylen, feed
mill operator and mayor of this
town of 600
"Some of the folks here are a
little hesitant to break the ice with
Earl, but after they start talking
with him, he's just the same as
always," Geylen said.
The four houses Zrust had un
der construction when he left
were completed by a local lumber,
yard. One of them was being built
for Geylen.
Zrust hasn't mingled much with
his old friends since his return,
but his family apparently has
picked up most of the loose ends.
They were in church last Sunday
and were at a school picnic a
lew days after they got home.
Zrust said he left because the
pressure of the construction busi
ness was "making me nervous."
He said working for someone eise,
as he did in Reno, had its ad
vantages. "Rut you don't have the
freedom you do when you're work
ing for yourself. Now I'm getting
anxious lo get back to work."
SHOE DONATION
SAWANSELMO. Calif. (API -Hazel
Smith Johnson, SS, said to
day she gave her shoes to charity
but she didn't mean to include her
jewels.
She asked police to help her
recover a diamond bracelet, a dia
mond bar pin and a diamond ring.
She explained she stuffs her jew
elry in old shoes for hiding. The
items in question disappeared with
a lot of shoes she gave to a chari
table organization.
She said the missing jewelry
was appraised at 2.200 in 1920.
mit;
THIS SATURDAY
ALL NIGHT!!
ComeEa.i
Stan Vats
iBHIIf
SBBrr
IIWlMlatlllaWlTptni
ariqjgtorjr
igula ruicui
ma
S3
State-Supported Schools
Set Higher Tuition Costs
PORTLAND (AP)-Studcnts at
Oregon's state-supported institu
tions of higher learning will pay
a bigger chunk of the cost of their
education, the state Board of
Hisher Education ruled Tuesday.
The ruling in line with a rec
ommendation by Gov. Mark Hat
field and the 1959 Legislature
will become effective with the fall
term.
Resident Oregon students will
pay $11 a quarter more or (33
more in the course of the academ
ic year, while the increase for
non-resident students is S21 or M
for the academic year.
Chancellor John R. Richards
said despite the increase, Oregon
student fees still rank about aver
age for those of state schools
around the nation.
The increase included an added
SI per term for the building fee.
The new schedule upped fees
from $74 to S35 at the University
of Oregon, Oregon State and Port
land State; from SM to $73 at Ore
gon College of Education. South
ern Oregon and Eastern Oregon:
from $190 to $201 at the medical
and dental school: from $69 to Wn
for medical and denta! technol
ogy: and from $58 to iftt for nurs
ing at the medical school.
Two years ago the-state insti
tutions raised fees $6 at the sug
gestion of the Legislature, which
cut the appropriation by the same
amount.
The board had met to review
bids on $9,035,000 in bonds to fi
nance campus expansion, which
would be repaid from student fees
and board and room without ap
propriated funds.
'Beer' Deleted
From, Contract
SAN FRANCISCO iAP) - The
San Francisco Board of Supervi
sors hunted through the fine print
in a hurry Tuesday and struck the
word "beer" out of a catering con
tract.
Marguerite Pratt, a citizen,
pointed out the board was about
to permit the sale of beer in four
city parks patronized almost ex
clusively by teen-agers. But Rose
Schuman, who is to manage the
four concessions, said it wouldn't
have made any difference.
"I have no license to sell beer, '
she said, "and I wouldn't sell it
on a bet." ,
APPEAL FOR MOSLEMS
PARIS iUPH The Catholic
and Protestant churches o f
France joined Tuesday in an un
precedented world appeal for help
for Moslems left homeless by the
war in Algeria. Maurice Cardinal
Feltin. archbishop of Paris, and
Pastor Marc Boeener. president
of the Frenclt Protestant Federa
lion, signed the appeal.
fata Teaite . "Silk. Affair" "Scoitdol 1 Sorrente"!
ffrgcBir FRIDAY!
k STHUNO) H
THe SHOCKMAKER Of THE YEAR
DANA ANDREWS.
aaBBBBBBBBasaSaaWaa , I, I
TTy Wilts fl
ONE COMPLETE SHOW THURS.' '
DAILY 7:no P. M
SIoAjU
1
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KJ i f 'tl af'l fimm I ' Til 1 1 1 r 4 M fTTi
PBaBay now.
Here Is the TRUTH you can never forget...
the TRUTH of WHAT HAPPENED ON "THE HILL"!
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HARRY OUA.KDINO
HIP TORN
tioaai RCRRARO
james e owio a
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WOOOY STROOI tORf IHII4TS
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.JONES MATTHAU M 10:00 enly
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