Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (July 13, 1959)
In The- Day's km By FRANK JENKINS The Big Four foreign ministers conference resumes its sessions in Geneva this morning after a three week "cooling off" period. 1 When the session opened, it was reported around the Palace of Na tions, where the meetings are held, that Russia's Gromyko had indi cated to the Western delegations that he did not wish to speak until after hearing what the West had to say. So America's Secretary of State Herter led off with a flat statement to Gromyko that the West will NOT negotiate under an ultimatum, duress or the continued threat of a new Berlin crisis. So- He told Gromyko If you want a summit meeting, call off your hatchet men. And he said in effect it would be bet ter if you put it in writing. What Gromyko replied has not come over the wires as this is written.' A bit of advice: . Don't pay too much attention to what is SAID at Geneva. We must remember that what is eoine on lere is a poker game a poker game with IMMENSE stakes. You can't tell what a poker play er is going to DO by what he SAYS. Our people in Geneva are said to hope that Russian First Deputy Premier Kozlov, who has been scouting the United States for whatever information he can pick up, will take home to Mr. K a clearer picture of the real pur pose and tough determination of the U.S. in the Berlin crisis. What will he tell his boss? Well, he left for home this morn- Ing. He wound up his tour of our country with a press conference yesterday at which he spoke in complimentary terms of our high ly developed technology, and add ed that he has been impressed by "the desire of the American people to preserve peace." But, he told reporters at the air port this morning: "I AM STILL CONVINCED THAT PRESIDENT EISENHOWER'S - GRANDCHIL DREN WILL LIVE TO SEE A COMMUNIST AMERICA." What did he mean by that? Nobody knows what a communist means by what he says. A com- niunist lies as readily as a my- pah bird talks. am let s no a nine supposing. Suppose Kozlov WAS impressed by America's might and America's determination. Suppose he reports to Mr. K that America is too tough to tackle now, but IF GIVEN TIME ENOUGH is certain to be destroyed by communists working from within as a building is de stroyed by termites boring from within. . That could be a FACE SAVING move. It could provide Mr. K with an excuse to BACK OFF at Ge neva in the belief lhat if given time enough America will be weak ened and eventually destroyed by communist infiltration. This, of course, is only guess workand wild guesswork, at that. But the ways of diplomacy espe cially communist diplomacy are devious. And there are times when ways to save face become im mensely important. .We'll see what we'll see. Anyway, our course at Geneva is clear. We must s.tand firm. If we run, we're goners. Demo Chief In Effort To WASHINGTON (AP)-PauI M. Butler says some Democrats want to replace him with a member of Congress as Democratic na tional chairman so they can con trol the party's I960 convention. He doesn't think they will succeed. Butler said he will continue to urge a more "positive and ag gressive" legislative program in Congress. He considers it his job, he said, to express "what I feel to be the majority point of view." In a news conference Saturday and in a television interview Sun day, Butler insisted he's only re porting the sentiment he finds and not directly criticizing such lead ers as Senate Democratic Leader Lyndon B. Johnson of Texas and House Speaker Sam Rayburn D Tex I. Butler in turn has come in for criticism in Congress since he said a week ago the party faces trouble In the 1960 elections unless its leadership in Congress moves more in the direction-he advo cates. He said Sunday there are re ports his Capitol Hill critic al ready have agreed to support a Western senator as his successor. Other discounted his report. Sen. Mike Mansfield (D-Montl, the assistant Democratic leader, aid he knew of no move to re-i Fire Chief Rips Officials Of NY Airport NEW YORK (AP) "Ignorance and confusion" ruled at Idlewild Airport while a crippled jet air- liner with 113 persons aboard circled the field, the city fire com missioner charges. Fire Commissioner Edward F. Cavanagh Jr. said Sunday that city firemen got little or no co operation from Port of New York Authority personnel who run the airport. Instead, he said, they en countered an arrogant attitude. The Pan American World Air ways plane, which dropped part of its landing gear just after tak ing off for London, circled the field for four hours before mak ing a safe emergency landing early Sunday. Austin 'J. Tobin, executive di rector of the Port Authority, re sponded hotly to Cavanagh's crit icism. He said the lire commis sioner had made an attempt "to besmirch a magnificent feat." The rescue efforts were severely hampered by thrill seekers throng ing to the airport by car and on foot. Some tramped across the meadows. Some went across Ja maica Bay by boat. Airport authorities said there were 50,000 of them, knocking over barriers, spilling onto the field, jamming roads so fire equipment couldn't get through. Meanwhile, the pilot circled, a mile up in the 'night sky, waiting to make an emergency landing. He worried about the more than 100 tons of airplane, with a land ing speed of 530 miles an hour, crunching down on the broken landing gear. He was afraid the plane might slew off the runway, or catch fire as the broken gear struck sparks from the concrete. He circled to burn up fuel and to give firemen time to spread antifire foam over the runway. He didn't know it at the time, but a greater danager awaited him on the ground. At least 4,000 persons lined the runway. Gunman Kills Worshiper TULSA, Okla. (AP) A burst of automatic gunfire broke the Sunday calm at the Tulsa Baptist Temple. One person -was killed and three were wounded. J. R. Swarb, 34, a self-service laundry operator, threw down his .25 caliber automatic pistol when cornered by a traffic policeman. The berserk gunman fired at ieast six shots into the congrega tion just before the start of morn ing worship. Services resumed with a visiting minister in the pulpit. Police Commissioner Robert L Mawhinney said Swarb tried to kill his ex-wife's husband,. Ken neth Starnes, 33. Instead he fatal ly wounded his ex-wife's mother, Viola. M. Bridges. 49. Starnes was critically wounded. His wife, Earlene Starnes, 31, was shot in a leg. Cornelia Bragg, 58, wife of the U.S. commissioner in Tulsa, was also wounded in a leg. Mawhinney quoted Swarb as saying he would have killed the Temple's minister, the Rev. Clif ford Clark, "if I had seen him." The commissioner said the slight, angry, gunman was mad at the pastor because he believed he had given his former wife church approval to remarry. Sees Failure Replace Him place Butler with a Western sen ator. "I would like to see Butler stay on and do just a little bit better job than he has been doing,' Mansfield told a reporter. Without reference to Butler's talk of an ouster move, Sen. Stuart Symington (D-Mo) said he was not suggesting at this time that Butler should resign. Any ouster move probably would come up at a mid-September meet ing of the Democratic National Committee. Butler said he has no plan to resign unless a majority of the committee thinks he should quit. Butler said that only two com mittee members from whom he has heard have criticized his stand. He named them as Sen, Theodore Francis Green (D-RI) and Byron Skelton of Temple Tex. A third member spoke out Sun day. In St. Louis. Mark R. Hollo ran said he thinks Butler should resign for the good of the party. "I think Butler is wrong and is stirring up tt lot of unnecessary trouble." said Holloran, national committeeman from Missouri. Butler told his news conference that "we can't win the elections of 1960 if we are to ape the Re publican party and try to outdo the Republican party in some of the things it stands for. KLAMATH -It Paget Price Five Crnti I s ( tr- - - ' 1 l1 . PROBLEMS OF STATE were the principal topic of discussion at this luncheon meeting Saturday at the Airport Cafe at Kingsley Field. Secretary of State Howell Appling Jr. mot with city and Air Force officers. Shown here, left to right, are Councilman Walter Fleet, acting mayor; Mr. and Mrs. Howell Appling Jr.; Mrs Eugene Hollway; Maj. Eugene Hollway; Fred Heard, and Lt. Col. John J. Scott. Appling's appearance in Klamath Falls was his first since taking the state post. He was principal speaker at the Sunday picnic at Malm Park sponsored by Howell Appling Republican Urges Attack On Demo Tax Handling "We must destroy for all time the false face of an unprincipled opponent who has masqueraded for so long as the friend of the so-called 'little-man' even while de stroying his life's savings through inflation, confiscating his wage in creases through higher and high er taxation, and doing irreparable harm to the genuineness of the labor movement by encouraging and exaggerating class hatreds." With this challenge. Secretary of State Howell Appling urged Repub licans Sunday at Malin Park to conduct a "factual and frontal at tack" on the vulnerable areas of thei opposition party. a'-?.;:X:p)!' . Secretary Appling spoke to the Klamath County annual Republican picnic following a series Of week end meetings with party commit tees and local officials.. It is neither mathematically or socially possible to help anybody by paying them more and more in watered-down currency that will buy less and less," the secretary' said. "Among those who have learned this cruel lesson," he said, "are pensioners, war-bond holders, disabled veterans, and parents who have scrimped to give their chil dren a college education." Mil lions who are on relatively fixed incomes are learning the lesson of inflation the hard way, he said. "We must have a dollar that will buy beefsteak instead of baloney," he added. Appling accused left-wing Demo- World News In Brief United Press International STEEL New York Steel con tract talks broke off Sunday night in New York and the industry is beginning to shut down the blast furnaces in expectation df a strike at midnight Tuesday. KOZLOV New York Soviet First Deputy Premier Kozlov leaves New York for home. CONFERENCE Geneva The East-West foreign ministers con ference resumes in Geneva. DEFENSE Washington Sen ate opens defense money bill de bate: Eisenhower" reported to have his hackles up over plan to in crease Marine Corps. RACKETS Washington Sen ate investigators call Hoffa back to witness chair to testify on charges of wrongdoing in Team sters Union. TRIAL San Diego, Calif. Plain, plump Wanda Brogdon, 33, and her lover go on trial today on charges of strangling her two small sons because "they were a bother." Red Radio Says Dogs Up, Back LONDON (AP) - The Soviet Union rocketed two dogs into space July 10 and brought them back to earth, Moscow radio said today. ; The broadcast said the dogs were carried aloft in a ballistic rocket weighing 2,200 kilograms-r-4.845 pounds. Quoting an official Tasa dis patch, the radio said a quantity of equipment was also parachuted back to earth. The first announcement gave no details of the height attained by the rocket. FALLS, OREGON, MONDAY, JULY 13. 1959 Telephone TU 4-8111 Klamath County Republicans. cratic leaders of "making political hay by playing the Robin Hood game of taking from the rich and giving to, the poor." The dilemma they face now, he said, is that "they have run out of rich people to take from ... if they confis cated the total earnings of every rich man in Oregon, they still couldn't finance their vole-pur chasing spree." Tax increases, he indicated, are now coming out of "the hide of the middle and lower income groups." He expressed concern about recent tax increases of 12 million dollars in the Oregon Dem ocrat-controlled . Legjjslature, add; ing. . . . and now, lo and be hold, they tell us to get . ready to cough up 70 million - dollars more in the 1961 session. The re ward they promise us if we again elect them to office is a 40 per cent income tax increase." Outlining the "Challenge of 1960" Secretary Appling called for a campaign between elections. "We will never lay hold of our problem adequately until we collect and spend most of our money, plan our program, organize our pre cincts, and select our candidates long before the actual campaign gets underway," he said. - Appling called for more compe tence in politics and government. "The end purpose of all political action," he said, "should be good, competent government. We must, above all, provide qualified can didates that can do the job. Ca pable, responsible performance in office is the best politics. Expressing optimism for a re turn to responsible government in the 1960 elections, the secretary detailed his views on political ac tivity. He indicated the party must be objective and critical in select ing candidates; active in helping them become known; and effective in getting out the vote. "Elections by the score have been lost by candidates who had a majority that never got to the polls," he said. Moulding public opinion is a vi tal function of political organiza tion, he said. "Public opinion is not shaped in one crisp, clear stroke of a candidate's campaign speech," he emphasized. "Public issues and personalities have a way of seeming vague and somewhat remote to the large body of the electorate who are not really very interested in politics and government except, perhaps, for a few weeks around election time," the secretary said. To translate the issues into terms that make them "well known, local, specific and personal" is an important job for party worker! he indicated. "We must stand tor the pro grams that are truly in the best long-range interests of all the peo ple," Appling said, "and the is sues must be interpreted in terms of the well being of the typical citizen." Appling insisted that fiscal re sponsibility be uppermost in t h e Republican program, and offered firm support for "the free market processes as opposed to a social istic organization of our economy." 'We must realize that our high er standard of living comes, not from government handouts, b u t from the opportunity for man to produce more of the things he needs more efficiently," he laid. He called for a program of em ployment, education and recreation rather than emphasis on "relief checks, listless minds and Idle bodie." No. WIS FOREST FIRE DANGER TODAY KEEP OREGON GREEN Weather FORECAST Klamath Falls and vicinity: Generally fair with vari able afternoon clouds. Low tonight 43-4S; high Tuesday 80-8S. High yesterday 91 Low last night ' 56 Precip. last 24 hours 0 Since Oct. 1 ..- .5.82 Same period last year 19.03 Northern ' California . Fair through Tuesday except coastal overcast. Winds offshore .north westerly, 15-30 miles aa hour. Damage Set At $2 Million HOLLYWOOD (UPI) - The la test fire department report on loss es in the disastrous Laurel Can yon blaze listed today 38 homes destroyed, two houses with major damage and 300 acres blackened. Damage was estimated at two million dollars. Cause of the four-hour fire which roared through the area Friday still was undetermined. But fire men said there was no indication that it was deliberately set. Properties destroyed had an av erage value of $22,000, according to a Red Cross survey. They ranged in loss from $9,000 to $150, 000. ' Firemen, posted lo keep a close watch over the smoldering em bers, were recalled from the area Sunday with only a few mountain patrol units remaining. "We will watch it very carefully the next two or three days," said battalion chief Walter C. Runyan. "But we believe there is little likelihood of a new outbreak." Girl Admits Killing Seven ELMIRA, N.Y. (UPI)-An at tractive 15-year-old girl was un able today to explain why she deliberately set fire lo her home, killing six of her sisters and a brother whom she loved "very dearly," police reported. Psychiatric tests were sched uled for sandy-haired Jane Shu sko, one of 10 children, who ad mitted she threw a lighted match on some papers in a clothes clos et late Saturday night. The ensu ing fire swept her family's half of a two-story, two-family house in a middle-class neighborhood, resulting in the asphyxiation of her sisters and brother, ranging in age from 2 to 12 years. The girl's mother, Mrs. Lillian Shusko, 39, who was sitting on the front porch when the fire broke out, escaped uninjured. A sister, Catherine, 13, rescued the other child, 11 months, with the assistance of a neighbor. The fa ther, Michael, 41, was at work at a cooperative milk plant where he ii a farming machine opera tor. . Authorities said the fire swept the home so rapidly that rescue of the ttven victims was impos sible. U . Progress Hopes Outlined By Herter To Red Leaders GENEVA (AP) Russia'! An drei A. Gromyko unexpectedly de manded today that German ad visers be Included In secret meet ings of the Big Four foreign min Uteri conference. The demand blocked agreement on a secret session Tuesday and threw the conference procedure into confu sion. The Soviet maneuver appeared to be a determined new bid to give greater recognition In the conference to East Germany. GENEVA (AP) The West called today for immediate resort to secret diplomacy in the second round of the Big Four conference here in an effort to shelve the Berlin crisis and clear the way for a summit conference. U.S. Secretary of State Christian A. Herter told Russia the United States hopes for sufficient East- West agreement at Geneva to warrant a heads of government meeting. He said the best way to seek this agreement would be in small private meetings, of the foreign ministers beginning Tuesday. The foreign ministers met just 13 minutes short of four hours, the longest meeting since they be gan their conference May 11. Herter challenged Soviet For eign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko to provide spcific assurances for the protection of Western rights in West Berlin during a Soviet-pro posed moratorium in the Berlin crisis. The Big Four conference re sumed meetings at the Palace of Nations after a three-week recess, with Herter as chairman for the day. He recalled that during the first round of the conference the West and the Soviet Union had proposed plans for the future of Berlin and each side had rejected the other s proposal. He specifically cited Gromyko's proposal of June 10 for a one-year standstill agreement on Klamath Gl Mishap Victim A Klamath Falls youth, pfc. Gerald- Thomson,' was fatally in jured while riding as a passen ger in a military vehicle in Ko rea recently, according to United Stales Army officials. There were no further details. He was the son of Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Thomson, 2157 Recla mation Street, and died June 9. He was a native of Minnesota and a resident of this city for two and one-half years. Thomson graduated from Klamath Union High School in June, 1958 and en tered the service the same month. Survivors Include his parents; paternal grandmother, Mrs. Ber nice Thomson, Waseca, Minnesota and maternal grandmother, Mrs L. B. Lynn, Eugene. The family is now awaiting fur ther information as to when the body will be shipped to Klamath Falls for burial. State Demos Slate Meet "Democrats from every Oregon county will meet in Portland on Saturday, August 1, in a statewide tribute to the sacrificial work of Dave Epps, our late state chair man," according to Rep. Robert Duncan, Mcdford, chairman of the Dave Epps memorial dinner. "Guests of honor at the banquet will be Sen. John F. Kennedy of Massachusetts, and Congresswom - an Edith Green of Oregon's Third District. Duncan is speaker of, the Oregon House of Representa tives. The banquet is scheduled for the Neighbors of Woodcraft Hall in Portland, according to Itate Rep. Beulah Hand, Milwaukie, vice chairman and now the ranking of ficer of the state committee. "We expect this memorial din ner to be one of the largest gath erings in the history of Oregon Democracy," Speaker Duncan con tinued. "We are all pitching in our time and talent because it launches the drive of Oregon' majority par ty to win again in 1960. We expect every elected Democratic official to attend, and the door i of course open to citizen generally. Tickets are to be $10 each, ac cording to- Professor Frank Rob erts of Portland State College, chairman of the ticket committee, and are available through, each county committee. KING IN SWITZERLAND MONTREAUX. Switzerland (UPI) - King Mohammed V of Morocco arrived by car from Pari Sunday for a three week vacation. A whole floor with 30 room wa reserved at the pluih Palace Hotel for the King and his entourage, Berlin and recalled that the time limit was later extended by anoth er Soviet plan to 18 months. In a reversal of their earlier stand, U.S. Secretary of State Christian A. Herter and his British and French colleagues were re po.'.cd ready to negotiate with So viet Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko on his offer of a Berlin standstill agreement. But they want the proposed moratorium to run for at least 30 Rebs Smashed In Honduras WASHINGTON (AP) - The State Department reports that for the second time in t w o months the Honduran government has crushed an armed revolt led by the same man. The department quoted the U.S. Embassy in Tegucigalpa as say ing Sunday's revolt was short lived but that there was heavy firing in the area around police headquarters in Tegucigalpa. The embassy said government troops and police beat back the attack, launched with a few pieces of field artillery as well as rifles and pistols. The reports named the leader of the revolt as Armando Veleas- quez Ccrrato, former army chief of staff, and said by agreement he was permitted to leave the Central American country again. (The Associated Press has re ceived no direct word from Tegu cigalpa since early Sunday night. That dispatch, delayed some hours in transmission, said firing was continuing throughout the city but centered around the police head quarters, "which seems to be the center of the revolt.") The State Department received no information on the number of troops involved in the fighting, nor of the casualties. But travelers arriving in Nica-j racua from Honduras Sundav'.' - m night said more than 100 persons were killed in Tegucigalpa. They said police, cadets of the Military Academy and troops at the San Francisco barracks took part in the revolt. Veleasquez led an attack by 500 rebels last May 11 on Gracias, a state capital in western Hondur as. Those rebels were driven into the mountains and Veleasquez reportedly took refuge ; in Costa Rica. Railroads Mull Strike Insurance NEW YORK (AP) The . Wall Street Journal said today that the nation'i railroads are considering a plan to blunt the threat of labor disputes with strike insurance. The program consists, in effect. of pooling industry funds in case of a strike against any participat ing carrier, according to the news paper. The agreement, an eight-page document, has been mailed to 300 railroads, members of the Assn. of American Railroads, Three-year labor contracts cov ering 840,000 railroad workers ex pire this fall. Earlier this year the railroad industry served. no tice on 23 unions it planned dras tic revisions of work rules and pay scales in the new contracts. Steel Strike Peace Talks 1 NEW YORK (AP) Stalled steel negotiations got under way again today at White House bid ding but with scant prospect of an agreement to avert a strike at midnight Tuesday. The union promised lo make "an all-American try" at negotiating a strike-saving settlement! R. Conrad Cooper, chief indus try negotiator, threw cold water on settlement prospect and showed irritation in posing with union President David J. McDon ald for photographers. Cooper said there was only one possible way a strike could be avoided for the union to .again extend It contract. McDonald, however, ruled out any further delay in a showdown, The union earlier had granted a two-week truce but it expires at midnight Tuesday Cooper said the union already has caused the industry Injury by the fact that many firms have had to close down some facilities in the costly preparation for an or derly industry shutdown. The union and industry negotia tors agreed to resume peace talks at noon in an effort to avert a strike at midnight Tuesday. The bargaining talks had broken off Sunday with no further nego tiating Sessions scheduled. President Eisenhower this morn- ing: urged both tides to resume months, instead of the 18 months offered by Gromyko, and they want a pledge of Soviet respect for Western rights in Berlin. Herter was designated in a Western strategy meeting to lead the Western campaign when the Big Four conference reopened aft er a three-week recess. Western diplomats said that In his leadoff speech Herter would offer certain inducements such as a cut in troop strength in West Berlin. Herter and his colleagues want to know whether in accepting a moratorium with a deadline they would, in the Soviet view, be agreeing to give up their rights when the deadline expires. If a Berlin compromise can be arranged, an East-West agree ment on a summit conference to be held in the next two or three months seems certain. In the first round of the confer ence the Western ministers re- fused even to discuss Gromyko's proposal to maintain the status quo in West Berlin for 18 months. They insisted the U.S.S.R must guarantee Western access to West Berlin until Germany was reuni fied. During the conference recess the Western ministers have shed much of their pessimism about finding a way out of the Berlin stalemate. Their cautious optimism apparent ly grew out of Soviet denials that the Gromyko proposal for a stand still agreement was a trick to de prive them of their rights in Ber lin when the agreement expired. Although I do not come here with high hopes," Herter said on his return Sunday, "I believe it is possible, with good will on both sides, to- reach an agreement." . French Foreign Minister Mau rice Couve de Murville declared that "this time perhaps it will be possible to arrive at a limited con crete arrangement on the prob lems before us." ID HI VAN I A3flC VI 1 1 VI I bVUVM Odd-Ball Race LONDON (AP)-A Britlsh'lrmV ' captain traveling by motorcycle. helicopter and jet led the field today in the opening of an odd-ball race from. London's Marble Arch to Paris' Arch of Triumph. Capt. R. N. B. Walker made the 210-mile trip in a sizz!;jie 57 minutes 48 seconds as the' 10-day contest was launched by a Lon don newspaper to show how mucb time air-travelers waste on crowd ed roads between cities and air port. , Capt. Walker made the return trip in an hour and 15 seconds, traveling by the same means. - During the next 10 day, con testants for the $14,000 top. prize offered by the Daily Mail, can make as many trips as they like. They are allowed to travel by air or ground but must cross the Eng lish Channel by air. The race celebrates Louis Ble- riot's first air channel crossing 50 years ago. A navy officer used roller skates to weave through the London traf fic to a waiting Thames-side hell copter. The lone American entry i U.S. Army Cpl. George Weckerle of Llndenhurst. N.Y. Scheduled; To Resume the meetings to try to reach a strike-saving solution. David J. McDonald, union presi dent, met briefly with the union's executive board and then tele phoned R. Conrad Cooper, chief industry negotiator, to arrange the 1 resumption of talks. . The industry, prior to today's developments, had already started banking furnaces and slowing pro duction. Three days are normally required for a big plant to shut down without damaging equip ment. Three days are normally re quired for a big steel plant to make an orderly shutdown without damaging equipment. . The Steelworker Union reject ed a renewed proposal by the in dustry that the contract be ex tended beyond Tuesday midnight. After President Eisenhower had intervened, the industry and union agreed to a two-week extension beyond the original June 30 ex piration date. I McDonald said, ."The Industry - does not "want to negotiate and does not want to make an agree- ment." In view of that, he said. a further contract extension would be pointless. The industry said a new and In definite contract extension would he "the only practical way" U 'prevent a itrikt. 7