PAGF, 2 9 A nf .... .. -- 9 HERALD ftXD NfftS. 1rnth f)W O 9 'hiirsrlav nv. 12. lDri!? ft tin fiiinMimii in i 5k.i Vi t, Vtv, t '' -HZ,, s f it V A jiteifc , iian'ait w nil '4 A CROWN WILL REST upon th brow of one of these beauties, class candidates at Hen ley schools for queen of the 1959 all-school carnival to be held at the school Saturday night, November 14. This is the one big event during the year to make money for the athletic fund. The new queen will be crowned during the evening. Wearer of the crown will be determined by the number of tickets sold on a $575 Evinrude outboard motor. Left to right are the candidates: Kristy Speelman, Judy Parker, Cindy Dehlinger, Dawn , Reeder, Nancy Hunt and Connie Harris. GIs Battle Roaring Fire ft. LKOXARO WOOD. Mo (API Two hundred smoke black ened soldiers battled a roaring for est fire for seven hours Tuesday before extinguishing it. The fire licked to within .TO fi'cl of a trailer camp for enlisted men and their families, bul no one wa injured. .Most of the fire was in the Mark Twain National Forest, pari of which is on the military reserva tion. About 400 acres of trees were consumed. Wind gusts of up lo 2-3 miles in hour scattered the flames and lit times weary soldiers battled as many as seven (ires. The wind finally died down. Steel Hills Of Nation Stepping Up Operations 5 II M.fi-M r'int breathless, (nered'bt excitement! PJRY HRINT Fli M4RIF MINTA JAMES MASON ) JsJ 1(1 ALtKLU MllLHlU.lo' 'NORTH BY NORTHWEST' in ViitoVriion-rfCHNICOlOJt' kuii HSSIE JOYCE UNDIS PITTSBURGH 'API . Steel mills throughout the country hummed with activity today as the giant industry gradually stepped up operations following a court-ordered end of the 116-day nationwide steel strike. More than 50 per cent of the basic steel industry's StiO.noo workers are back on the job. The rest are expected to be back at work by the weekend. Mills are turning out fairly large tonnages of new steel. Only- five days after the U.S. Supreme Court upheld a Taft-Hartley in junction ending the strike, the big U.S. Steel Corp. reported mills producing above 25 per cent of capacity. The firm said it may hit BO per cent ot capacity by the weekend. Jones & Laughlin Steel said it expects to produce at 40 per cent this week. Although the long-idled mills swung into production relatively last, industry sources say it will be tour to six weeks before the mills can produce at the normal rale of about 90 per cent. Still hard-hit by tne effects of the strike are the approximately 135.000 workers who were Idled in other fields because their jobs depend on a going steel industry. About 20.000 of these mostly railroaders and coal miners have been called back to work. But for thousands of others, particularly those employed in industries that use steel, there will be a longer DOORS OPEN 6:45 P.M. ENDS TONITE "GREEN MANSIONS' and "BEAT GENERATION" &. -v 1 '"'AN , w.Tamm. m . . period of idleness until fresh steel supplies become available. General -Motors Corp. an nounced it would close the last of its passenger car assembly lines today, idling 7,100 more workers. Chrysler Corp. said it has enough teel for only two more weeks Iron ore, one of steel's raw ma terials, is being moved by iron ore tleets from the upper Great Lakes to the mills. The ships normally stop operating in mid December when the lakes freeze, but the Army Corps of Engineers announced the usual Dec. 15 clos ing of the Soo Locks between Lakes Superior and Huron will be postponed indefinitely so the bad ly needed ore can continue to move lo mills. Although sleelworkers went back to work when called, Wheel ing Steel employes showed their resentment. Hundreds at Wheel ing's Vorkville, Ohio, plant wore prm hands that said: "USW of A. Ike's Slaves." At the Beech Bot tom. W. Va., plant some men car ried a sign that stated: "We shall leturn as slaves of Ike." In Los Angeles, United Steel workers officials charged that U.S. Steel violated the intent of the court's order by laying off 20 per cent of the workers at the Maywood plant. The issues that started the strike remain unsettled. No negotiations are scheduled between the unions and top in dustry firms, and the Federal Mediation Service says it plans none for about two weeks. Presi dent David J. McDonald of the Sleelworkers said the union is ne gotiating with about 10 or 15 smaller steel firms. The union seeks a wa;e in crease and the right to change work rules in plants to economize. Tne union, however, says it will not yield (o the industry's work rule demands. ! It's youth Bet to S songs and ! adventure JgS& ! It's the ! FABULOUS ! FABIAN i and that "BLUE DENIM" ; GIRL! -1 HOUND DOG MAN CinmScop ' ii k. S COLOR by oe tuxe I VA' " f 1 Fee Of Mor Campaigned For Expose WASHINGTON (AP)-The man Charles Van Doren ousted on the rigged TV quiz show "Twenty- One" conducted a crusade to ex pose Van Doren as a fraud, i House committee investigator says. The contestant, Herbert Stem- pel, has testified he was ordered by the show's producers to lose deliberately to Van Doren. Stem pel himself had won H9.O00. Stempel was infuriated by Van Doren's going on to win $129,000 and unearned nationwide fame as a great brain, investigator Rich ard N. Goodwin writes in a Life magazine article. Stempel embarked upon what he called a crusade for truth but which became a campaign to ex pose Van Doren and the entire fraudulent quiz show business," Goodwin said. Goodwin said Stempel was one of the best sources of information the House subcommittee had setting up the hearings that dis closed that the television quiz shows were shot through with fix ing and fakery. The climax for Stempel came ast week, Goodwin said, when Van Doren finally confessed to the committee that he had been given all the answers in advance, well as coaching on how to grim ace and wipe sweat from his brow in the isolation booth. "Stempel flew down from New York to watch him testify," Good win said. "He sat in a section of the caucus room where he could see Van Doren's face. His long campaign had come to a dramat ic end: phony quiz shows had been destroyed. ' Goodwin added, "Stempel's feel ings about iwenty-une useu went deeper than his admittedly strong feelings about Van Doren While he was on the show, Stem pel was called 'the poor boy from Brooklyn' ihe wasn't poor, and he was from Queens). "In his humble role he had to address the mastei of ceremonies as 'Mr. Barry' 'other contestants called him Mack'). Every week Stempel wore the same old suit and a shirt that was frayed around the collar. One night he decided to wear a good suit. After the show, producer Dan Enright said: 'ourc not doing your iiomework. Herb.' Stempel insists that after his defeat one oC the show's producers said. 'Now we 1iave a clean-cut intellectual as champion instead of a freak with a sponge mem ory.' To Stempel this was one more insult from the Barry-En-right organization." Goodwin's article, utilizing in side information he collected as a subcommittee investigator, was written with the knowledge of sub committee Chairman Oren Harris (D-Ark). Harris, at his Arkansas home, said Tuesday night he told Good win (hat the article should not dis cuss the work of the subcommit tee. He said he didn't know whether Goodwin had been paid for the article. The magazine said in New York :t never discloses what it pays for articles and had no idea whether Goodwin cleared the sale first vith the subcommittee. "DENNfS THE MENACE" l . I H-i-2 'OPtH THIS DOOR! 7A HcAk MZ V Injunction 'Stab In Back.' Say Steel Firm tmpioyc Mnnimvn.T.F. Pa. AP Smoke pours today from the giant Fairless works of U.S. S'eel Corp. There is activity, life and bitter ness. "A stab in the back. An ace-in-ihs.holp for U.S. Steel." some of the 6.100 employes call the Taft- Hartley Injunction which sent them back to work Saturday. Howard Park, a maintenance crew worker in an open-heanh furnace, minced no words. "It's hard to believe the com pany is not behind the move," he says. "It's hard to say whether or not the men will cooperate in keeping up production. After all, they are against going back." Vincent Hentz, a sheetmetal worker, said he needed the money "just as bad as the next guy" but didn't want to go back. "Nov. 7, 1!)59, was as bad a day as Dec. 7. 1941." said Al Morgan. an open hearth worker, referring to the 1941 bombing of Pearl Har bor. "Nobody likes us," said Paul E. Schultz Jr., of the sheet and tin department. "You work for 80 days to build up the steel supply, then vou go out on strike again that much longer." Schultz said production would be affected because the men wouldn't have what he called extra drive or incentive to produce. "I wouldn't call it a slowdown," Schultz explained, "but the men feel as if they were pressured, into working and they rebel against it." If You Like ... GOOD MUSIC You'll Like . . "MUSIC FOR DINING" ON KFLW 6 to 7 p.m. Every Day Monday Thru Saturday 'Wired' Man Dies At 77 FAIRMONT, W.Va. AP - Hoy- Walter Smith, one of the first men in the nation lo have his heart "wired" for life-giving electric stimulus, died Wednesday in a Fairmont hospital. He was 77. Smith was a retired coal miner from nearby Barrackville. His physician s.iid he died from a heart disease. The doctor add ed that the Pacemaker machine. which provided an electric stim ulus lo keep Smith's heart beat iiik, was operating perfectly but the heart just gave out. Smith underwent an operation last August to attach lo his heart small wires from the battery op erated apparatus which fits on the chest and regulates Ihe heart beat. -! DON SIEGEL """"i rem Piwnw i wmm Mil i ro ' . mil Oliuun - iiniuiun iiiiuu! j , DOOII tTIVINt i . .. '. - - " Klumath Falli, Orrfon Sfrvtng Southern Oregon nd Northern California Pubtuhfd daily except Saturday Southern Oregon Puhjthing Company Min at Esplanade Phone Tl'xedo 4-Jtlll THANK JKNKINS. Editor RIU. JKNKINS, Managing Editor FLOYD WYNNE. City Editor Entrred as necond eiai matter at tha Pwt offtre at Klamath FalU, Oregon, on August 30, 190 under art of Con gre, M an- h 3, 1 RT9. Second -flan pmtage paid at Klamath Ealla. Oregon, and at additional mttttinrt offices. SV'BSCRIP riON RATES Carrier 1 Month V fl Month .. ,, ., S 0 1 Year . ...... HI OO Mji1 In Advanr I Month I !M Mont ha .. -, - IH.V) I Year - $5 00 Carrier and tValer Wee dajft i opy ,. . .. Sc Sunriasi. ropv 10c t'MTLU PRFss INTER NATIONAL ASSOCIATFD PRESS AI OIT rH'RE At' Or CIRCtV-AriON Suhwnher not receiving dettvtrv of meir nrin and jsewt, pieaa pnone TUxedo 4 UI Nfor T P M After T PM. rhi-me Maurice Mitltr Or culauon MadAgtr TCitado 4-4751 Red Nation Raps Chinese NEW DELHI (LTD The Yugo slav ambassador to India and Ne pal warned today that Commu nist Chinese aggression in the border dispute with India also "poses a threat to Nepal." It was the first criticism of Red China's recent actions by a Communist nation. Ambassador D. Kveder said in Nepal that world war might break out on the border issue and ' everyone will have to suffer the consequences of atomic explo sions." Kveder visited Katmandu, Ne pal, to present his credentials as Communist Yugoslavia's first minister to that small Himalayan kingdom. Nepal is a protectorate of India, which handles its de fense and foreign affairs. It is lo cated in the mountains between Tibet and India, quite near some areas in which clashes have tak en place. I The Yugoslav ambassador ac cused China of "trying to assert her authority over Indian terri tories through brutal force of bul lets" and thus posing "a danger to world peace." "China is acting. . .against the larger interest of world peace," Kveder said. "If the fire is al lowed to develop it will be a dan ger to the whole world. The statement by the Yugoslav ambassador was the first from the Communist world that openly criticized Red China's actions on Ihe Sino-Indian border. This could be attributed to the fact that Marshal Tito's "independent" Communist government docs not get along with the Peiping regime. AIRMAN William H. John son, son of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Johnson, 2237 Hope Street, Klamath Falls, recently completed initial Air Force basic training at Lackland, Texas. He will at tend a technical training course for radio and radar specialists at Keesler Air Force Base, Mississippi. France, Germany, Great Britain and Italy signed the Munich Agree ment in 19?.!!. Steve Dunne Is a "Mr. Flxlf In a tlx In tha big-laugh story LIGHT IN THE FRUIT CLOSET" TONIGHT ON Award Theatre 6:30 CH 5 brought to you by HnLrtilon and Aunt Jomlma Pancakes tin products Tha Quattar Oaia Company FOR THE REST OF YOUR LIFE! TRY A CARLSON MATTRESS 312 Colli 34.95 Guaranteed 5 Years SEE AT CARLSON'S MATTRESS and Upholstery Company 2405 S. 6th TU 4-4510 AT WESTERN THRIFT VENETIAN GLASSWARE i All blown glass in many styles and colors . . . and look at West ern Thrift's Low. Low Prices!!!! 26" Wine Jug 1.95 20" Wine Jug 1.79 9'2" Vases 2.88 Decorator Ash Trays .. 2.88 Plus . . . Gold Bond Stamps Lay-Away Your Christmas Gifts Now from our Big Selection! DESERT FLOWER ! HAND i BODY LOTION S100 I i REGULAR 2.00 SIZE . i I -""--- ' POND'S ANGEL SKIN w... Tt.;l. 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