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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 13, 1959)
PAGE 4 A HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls, Ore. Sunriav, Dec. 13, 1fl59 . BOY SCOUTS of Montague Troop 51, sponsored by the Montague Rotary Club, presented plaques of appreciation to representatives of business firms that contributed large amounts of lumber for new tent frames at the scouts' Lake ef the Woods camp. Grant Hosford, left, receives a plaque or) behalf of the Sharp Lumber Company of Yrelca and Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Whitfaker accept for Fruit Growers Sup ply of Hilt. Making the presentation are Scouts Fenley Crawford, left, and Dennis Dutra. Photo by Betty Dow wv?y . 4 '"?' LARRY AMUNDSON is now associated with John H. Houston as a local repre sentative of the Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States. He is a veteran of 22 yean with the U.S. Marine Corps and left active service with the rank of major, coming here from North Carolina. He lives with his wife and 9-month-old daughter, Heidi, at 4303 Onyx Avenue. Area Man's Body Found In Woods BONANZA The body of a local man, John T. Brndshaw, B.I, was found early Saturday morning In a wooded area near here. Bradshaw, who had been re ported missing 'by his wife Fri day evening, was said to have been despondent. Chief of Police Louis Van Sipc laid that a hose, believed to have been connected to the exhaust of the dead man's car was found near the vehicle. Cookie Bake Held TULKLAKIC The Business and Professional Women held their an nual cookie bake and recipe ex change Monday evening. Decem ber 7, in the high school. Presi dent Mrs. II. F. Kanitz. reported that around 20 women attended Mrs. Dorothy Manccau gave a demonstration of Christmas s 71 wreaths and arrangements maricjlnking part in the marriage cere irom native materials. DATE U-g-ifT. ma; tnrtji Hrt'i A A. tj 11 UT7 Truck Trtal D. . 1 0. 9. O. S. C'l. TeUl Raile WlltM Ruatate Tt WAT 771 ItTJ n JtTI (M) 4 15 Kmart. toad Praaaaalni loMfaad Starah Una Lark TmAJ Tat.l trot rcfMmcr1, L eartlfl u aaattni K.O. fra Cartirial aaa ahliaamU anly an Mnr lota aantaln hlh Baraantaa 1 lta cmuln lawar pareantajra af l ImX livtttock 0 Lions Aide Visits Area MERRILL Dave Irving, district governor of the Lions Club, paid a surprise visit to a dinner meeting of the Merrill Lions Club held Monday, December 7. Other guests attending the meeting were Ber nard Millet. Ron Mills, Wendell Moore and John D. Moore, all of Merrill, and 20 members of the Tulelake Hotary Club. A challenge to a donkcv basket ball game Irom the Merrill Volun tccr Fire Department was read the game will be played at the Merrill High School on February 3 Sight conservation chairman Robert Dragoo reported that glass cs had been purchased for one child. Four more children will have their eyes checked this month. Appointed to the commun tv Christmas tree committee were Lloyd Deboy, Don Harris, Jim Shuck and Bob Graves. Don Crawford, scoutmaster, re ported on the Christmas tree gath ering by the Boy Scouts. The trees are now for sale at the Goodyear Store. President Cliff Ongman renort- en on a cum visitation to the Dor- lis Lions Club on December 2 by 23 Merrill Lions Club members. I he Merrill club returned home with the Leo the Lion trophy. All Shook Up l-WIULANU (AP) A sailor home from the Navy reached over and kissed his wile Friday. It shook him all up. His wife too, for the car he was driving veered over and banged into a concrete building pillar. I he sailor, Russell Harlan John son, 30. Portland, escaped inlurv His wife Shirley, also 30, suffered a chin cut. Up In The Air IAII'1.1, I'ormosa (AP) Miss Feng Hsiiiying, 18. and Cant Cheng Ching-licn. a Nationalist uninesc paratrooper, were up in nie air in approaching their mar riage Saturday. They parachuted from an Air Force C46 transport for the nup tials, the best man and 12 other Imony also parachuted .r?IiT2.!I!?5TIS KU"'' Mm OWTOSmON REPORT, Wi9 CROP StXMH WITH 19W CROP SEASON COMPARISONS CWUMTm PIOURB THRU PHr L. 1959 OOWIia) BY OREOON-CAUFORNIA POTATO CCKKITTO, P.O. M 7W, REDfCND. ORM0N Hiho-t.Or.. Ujl A2i$ lls WJ MM 1J2Z JTSi id JRS lSr-I J 9 loan 7M V 1923 LU9 JTST SH ?7JT u u ax U 1155 1700 rm i04o 7m JTSf lSPrT ITTf (M) (73) (U) Vt 3 57 151 109J UJ Jl M? 1A43 109, Jiii 714, r3 iSii lAljJ (J4i) (M) (VS) -A773 imi 1W7 MM 2C1 ln04 2604 2S2 610 lh7 141114 wa lfts04 6 1 4J9 40)1 aurkat raqalraaanta. PrWtlj tahl raporta fro temm araaa laeaaplata. 0.3. 1 and D.S. 2 iradaa. Inrlialaa 0,3 1 ana U.S. 2 gra4aa ar fall to faad, fm uta, aa Mad far alaatUi Paper Strike Status Quo; No Date Set For New Meet PORTLAND IAP) Federal sol (or another meeting. Mediator Elmer Williams said no progress was made toward settlement of Portland's news paper strike in a meeting between management and the striking Stcreotypers Union Friday. Williams said no date had been Slick Roads Cause Wrecks A weekend snowstorm turned Northern California and Southern Oregon roads to ribbons of ice but police reported remarkably lew accidents. One woman received minor in juries when her car smacked a truck and tractor on the point facing Lake Ewauna just south of the city limits at 10:30 a.m. Sat urday. A 19."3 sedan operated by Lor raine Alice Clark, IB, of Klamath Falls, received severe damage The truck was slightly damaged, state police said. Investigating officers said the truck was southbound and pulled wide of a snowbound car parked at roadside. The Clark car skidded when it swerved to give the truck more room, they said. No citations were issued. Another collision occurred at 4:02 p.m. at the corner of Old Midland Road and O'Connor Road at 4:02 p.m., stale police reported. No injuries resulted, they said, and no citations have been issued A 1959 sedan operated by Archie Wilmer Milligan of Dorris skidded on an inclined turn as he struggled to avoid hitting another vehicle which failed to stop at a stop sign officers said. , His car struck a third car driven by Harry Lewis Webber of Route 3, Klamath Falls, police reported. Damage was not major. State police also received a re port of an accident involving a truck near Sun Pass north of Klamath Falls Saturday evening. but details were not available. Of ficers said no injuries were re ported. City police investigated a minor accident involving cars driven by Clarence A. Peterson of 2432 Or chard Avenue and Freddie Lee Ward of 130 Martin Street at 11:44 a.m. at Owens Street and Vine Avenue Saturday. No injuries re sulted. They also received a report of a collision between cars driven by David R. Steinbock of Klam ath Falls and Carl E. Yancey of 4009 Homcdale Road at 9:20 a m at the corner of Orchard and Di vision streets. Yancey was slightly injured, of ficers said. No citations were is sued. Grand Jury Indicts 4 LAKEVIKW Four secret indict mcnts were returned by the Lake County grand jury at its meeting last week. The new panel is made up of Walter Lightle, foreman: Ha zel H. Snow, Arthaleen Samples. Colleen D. Maw. George B. Bow ers, Constance Hoe and Helen B Michaelson. Judge Charles H. Foster has an nounced a term of court for Jan uary and February with about 10 cases to come to trial. The new jury list is made up of Raymond B. Dooley, Shirley E. Start, Ross Foster, Elizabeth Shulls, William Cannon, Eugenia M. Myers, Charlrs F'ultz. Leonard Hammer. Ann F. Gray. Mildred E. Morgan. Ethel Louise Steward, Raymond J Poore, Lawrence S. Quenell, Frank E. McUee. Patricia Weekly, Mel vin J. Walsh, Archie Osborne, Magdalene M. Merrill, Nick Gaw rnnski. Carl W. Lange, Ann E. Davidson, Hoy E. Peterson, Mel- vin L. Johnson, Bertram William Becker, John F. Scoville. Allen Byington. II. E. Caudell. Velma Simpson, William H. Castle, and I uean rt. hop. Cole. 1212 12M WO cvt.)- . RM Rlvr A2a ilia -.-(CAKLOTS 1232 12il 1252 1224 1717 1545 2224 J04 435 65?7 4150 J1959 t&ioSot t0 5C-14 J J41 7U? 5953 412 39i7J 2327 JJ? 174 1715 i 91 4J4 615 2522 458 M? M mm to Ira? rss; 472 215 4005 J015 29 6s 4AJI U077 u62 1422 20 142 U5 1342 J)?5 179 94 6514 J34 175 616 lM 104 OM5 ami ' 2Sil4 H3S TO 43 VS56T TOT 5499 49WJ (5) (77) (tot) (721) (741) ( (4tf (?S) (5) 1 I UJ M 1365 99) 27 31 4 14 5914 a liJi 22 " AT70 070 ) ) (1U) (54J) (Ml (M) J-aa m 11H tit? 4,01 uM 7smi mri alack tat WJ lnclada fa iMpa.aU thlna, atrrlnt, fVaaaliu, (law an) aaai N.O fraah aastat raqilraaanta. vlthU araa, aU. The Oregonian and Oregon Jour nal combined when the strike be gan Nov. 10 and since have boen'eartnqual!e .iarred an arca reat'h- publishing a joint edition at The Oregonian plant with non-union employes. There was a disturbance at the picket line Friday afternoon. The, Portland Intcrunion Strike Com- mittec said that a woman picket, had been struck by an automobile leaving the building. Portland po. lice said that an arrest had been made at the scene. They said de tails of the incident and names of the persons involved would not be available until later Saturday. when the arresting officer's re port is typed. In another development stem ming from the strike, two men were fined $75 each in Milwaukie Justice Court after being convict ed of assault and battery. .Mike Rovito and Marvin C, Mayo, former truck drivers for the Journal, were accused of at tacking two Journal distributors with hoses on the night of Nov. 22. The strike committee Friday night presented the fourth' in a series of television programs to tell its side of the dispute. James T. Marr, executive sec retary of the Oregon AFL-CIO, said that the public was being short-changed by the struck news papers. He said the joint publiea lion had a reduced circulation and was charging double rates for classified advertising. Representatives of unions in volved in the strike urged can cellation of subscriptions. The newspaper will reply to the unions later, a spokesman for management said. The Stcreotypers Union and management both have stated that one of the principal issues in the dispute is how many men it would take to operate a new plate casting machine which The Ore gonian says it plans to buy. John's Wife Is Star Of Tour NEW DELHI, India (API-At tractive Barbara Eisenhower has turned out to be a star attraction in each of the five nations visited thus far on President Eisenh'ow er's goodwill tour. In the absence of Mamie Eisen howcr, the President's wife, Bar bara has been treated as the un olficial First Lady even though she is not making the trip in that role. Unaccustomed to so much lime' light, Eisenhower's daughter-in- law has developed into an effec tive goodwill ambassador with her wide-eyed approach and en thusiasm for the people and things around her. The crowds that have turned out Italy, Turkey, Pakistan, Af ghanistan and India frequently craned their necks to see what Barbara looks like after catching a glimpse of the President him self. Nearly always they arc amazed at her height she's 5 foot 8. They alfo are impressed by the trim figure of this 33-year-old mother of four. Barbara usually attends official dinners in simply styled evening gowns. She wore a royal blue out fit with a baby !)lue stole at a Uttering New Delhi dinner Thurs day night. In Karachi she wore white. In Turkey she chose green and. in Italy a champagne-colored num ber. Barbara has yet to appear twice in the same daytime outfit. She lavors two-piece suits which she t lips off with a mink stole. The effect of all the attention howered on Barbara has been to push her husband, Maj. John Ei senhower, into the background. But he has been busy serving as an aide to his father and Hnnsn'l seem to mind as long as his wife hs havinff a onnrl lim Kiln Totl & ru 12i2 19 sa la tat-taM Hark auilat,. Ul trpaa ahplrata4 DrsdMU. Sharp Quake Jars PNW SEATTLE (AP) - A sharp ing nom victoria, u.t;., to Seattle Friday night, but apparently did no major damage. TU. f:.... i i. . iiim shock occurred at " "01' ana las,ea on'y a fcw minutes. Dr. Frank Neu- mann' University of Washington' M.-IS.I.UIUS.M, bdia me quane regis .i. auuui si on me .wercaiihaps consult with cgunty govern scale of 12. imcnts who have never operated iu,o,i sam ,e icmoior oc- other county functions on any oc curred about 75 or 80 miles north ' hask " nf Vn-HU n,nl,.l.l II C7 I Juan Island area where there are' several major faults. The only damage, according to police reports, was broken win dows at Port Angeles and Marys ville, Wash. "The first shock registered on the seismograph as a very, very sharp impulse," said Neumann. Sleet, Rain Stings East By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Sleet and freezing rain stung parts of Pennsylvania and New York Saturday. The sleet and rain marked the northern edge of a layer of warm, moist air which hung over most of the nation east of the Missis sippi Valley. Low-hanging dark clouds, fog and precipitation rang ing from drizzle to snow occurred in wide area of the eastern United States. Snow fell in an area from the upper Great Lakes eastward into upstate New York and New Eng land. An inch of new snow piled up at Burlington, Vt. Elsewhere, rainy weather con tinued in the Pacific, Northwest Wind gusts up to 40 m.p.h.. whis tled along the Washington coast Portland and Salem. Ore., both reported about .50 inches of rain in a six-hour span. The rest of the nation had most ly clear skies. Man Injured In Accident YREKA-Fre'derick Gale Noah. 35, of Grants Pass, was treated and released from the hospital after a one-car accident about 7:30 a.m. Friday one mile south of the Klamath River bridge. Noah, driving an Oregon-Ncvada-California Fast Freight truck and trailer loaded with groceries and Christmas merchandise, was north bound on Highway 99 when the rig went out of control on a curve. The truck tipped over and the trailer, still attached. Went ftvpr the bank. Groceries SDilled ovpr ine highway and traffic was halted temporarily. The driver's injuries consisted of cuts about one hand and bruises according to California Highway rairoi otticers. OBITUARY KIRK WEED James Edcar Kirk, fifi died here early Friday morning He was a resident of this commu nity tor the past 36 years . and owned and operated the Weed Bar ber Shop in the Court Club Build ing. Funeral services were held Saturday in the Latter Day Saints Chapel in Mount Shasta. Flake Willis, McCloud, officiated. Sur vivors are his widow, Neva; two brothers, Carl and Leslie, and a sister, Mrs. Florine Thurston Junction City, Oregon, and a step son Kenneth L. Silva, Chico. In terment will be in the Lane Me morial Park, Junction City. Up ton's Mortuary, Weed, in charge of transportation. ROYER. John Charles Royer, 88, native of Lawrence, Kansas, resident of Klamath County for 31 years, died here December 12, 1939. Survivors include the widow, Ruth E. of this city; daughters, Mrs. Ethel Crum rine and Hazel L. Royer of this city, Mrs. Grace V. I'eery of Win chester, Washington; a brother, N. A. Royer of Four Mile, Ore gon; nephews, Olin Royer of this city, Albert Royer of Florence, Oregon, Fred and Charles Royer of Coos Bay; also 10 grandchil dren and 13 great-grandchildren. Funeral services will take place from Ward's Klamath Funeral home on Tuesday, December 15, at 1:30 p.m. Funerals POSPISIL Funeral services for Joseph Pos- pisil. husband of May K. Tospisil who died December 11, 19."i!). will take place from the chapel of w ard s Mamath Funeral Home on Monday. December 14, at 1:30 p m., Dr. E. M. Causey of the First Baptist Church officiating. Concluding services and vault en tombment in Klamath .Memorial Park. Gia Hat A taaiirlful PEARL RING BEACHS JEWELERS In The Vjllata Ceurt 134 Main Local Control (Continued from Page 1 ously in a thoroughly documented statement road in the presence of Miss Jeanne Jewett, state adminis trator, and other state welfare de partment officials. THE COUNTY HAS no control over its budget, or even the hiring . M riisn rtPi-. i .h. ,.if-P. r. fice here, he said. He suggested (hat j( state wclfare department people are having troubles with - their budgets, "they should per- "V "V? P.resenl Z"" l"''0" f ""'l '" i uumiiu uas icouucu ill cm IIIKCA- ible and unsatisfactory county pub lic assistance pqogram that seems to proceed from crisis to crisis with a complete dependency on the state administration to deal with each minute detail of the pro gram. Mrs. Frank Johnson, a county commission member, said t h e county would not have run out of general assistance (welfare) funds last September if the state depart ment had told it how funds were calculated and allocated. Mrs. Richard Smith, commission chair man, said her relations with the state commission "would be much more pleasant if I functioned as a rubber stamp." Dr. W. P. Wilbur of Lakeview said the county commission there has no money, that he sent a pa tient to sit in the welfare office Thursday because the welfare de partment couldn't hospitalize him' and that the existence of Lake- view's hospital established 23 years ago was in jeopardy. Dr. Conn and other Klamath Falls doctors emphasized that their dispute with the State Pub lic Welfare Commission had be ginnings earlier than the curtail ment of funds that brought dissen sion to action. But the matter of budgeting the medical care pro-1 gram was discussed for hours. Miss Jewett said the per case cost of medical care in Oregon ranked high in the nation and therefore the health budget was carefully controlled. Said Dr. Keizer, "Ninety - per cent of this discussion is hovering over the fact that there was in adequate provision for medical costs." THE KLAMATH MEDICAL so ciety presented a five-point plan for exploration including employ ment of a county physician and establishment of a county hospital predicated on local control and including care and consultation on a chanty basis After the doctors had presented their case entirely, the legislative committee chairman, Mrs. Grace Peck of Portland, a veteran legis lator and a frank talker, agreed with the doctors in part but also chided them like a mother scold ing a child. "It might be wonderful if you could give your services for noth ing, she said, "but I don't think you have a right to be so charita ble. I don't think welfare recipi ents should be put on a basis where they must accept charity. They are good people, most of them have paid taxes in the past. . . . The basis is need. There arc taxpayers willing to pay this bill. I don't think you'd ever sell outright charity to the legisla ture. "The State Public Welfare Com-j mission is not infallible," she said, "but it doesn't have horns." Roads Dangerous Say State Police All routes in Klamath County and in Northeastern California are slick and dangerous, state police said Saturday night. They advise all motorists to car ry chains, especially over the Green Springs route to Ashland, the Willamette Pass and Highway 39 to Lakeview. The California Highway Patrol advised drivers to keep chains on over routes approaching Klamath and Lake counties. The little republic of San Marino claims to be the oldest state in Europe, dating its beginnings to the Fourth Century. Con9ratulaioni t Jamai C. Chanca wha ltd oil Company fint-ytar aoanrt in nrv. ica ana1 lalol oattormonca duiing Novambar. Sta Mr. Chance for information obout Standard'! euhrandina, portfolio of life cidtnt and lickn.n insurance including tha ntw Multi-Purpoie Plori, the iww. ' att idao In panonol financial planning. eC-4-v 4 i jm W X lUmUllU P0"iTLAND-0le)0 aWnf MNwftlt a Or He Acts Like But Senator Edltor't Note: This is the season when presidential hopefuls beat the bushes and prowl the prairies, talking, watching, count ing, wishing. Associated Press po litical writers have been traveling with potential candidates, taking a close-up look at the men who could wind up in the White House Here Arthur Edson, 15 years an observer of the Washington scene reports on three eventful days in the life of a man who insists he isn't a candidate, Sen. Lyndon B Johnson. By ARTHUR EDSON MARSHALLTOWW, Iowa (AP) Of all the coy presidential aspir ants who flit around the land, none is harder to figure than the tall ambitious, hard driving Texan. Sen. Lyndon B. Johnson. Johnson acts like a candidate He hustles from spot to spot, in his own twin-engined, six sealer plane, like a candidate. His words are the words of a candidate. He even smiles good like a can didate should. But publicly and privately John son will assure you that he's no candidate. Since he's making no effort to win the Democratic presi dential nomination, he savs. he hasn't a chance. Johnson s own explanation of what he's up to seems true enough. He's the Democratic lead er in the Senate, responsible for legislating for all the people. He should see what's happening out side of Texas, and he often does when Congress isn't in session. But as you watch and listen and wonder, a few impressions fall in to place. ! No man is more skilled at count ing the political house than Lyn don Johnson. .He's such a shrewd and careful political leader that even Republicans in the Senate sometimes speak of him in awe and in envy. Johnson is proud that the lights in his office burn late as he and his staff check and recheck on how other senators plan to vote. Assassination Plot Bared HAVANA (UPI) - A new plot to assassinate Prime Minister Fi del Castro has been uncovered! and 15 navy men arrested, reports from Santiago de Cuba said Sat urday. The reports came even as a military court sat in the trial of revolutionary hero Maj. Hubert Matos and 39 other officers on charges of treason for protesting alleged Communist infiltration in the Castro regime. Dispatches from Santiago said 15 Navy men attached to the Pun ta Blanca naval district in east ern Cuba have been charged with plotting to kill Castro during his visit to the capital of Oriente Province Nov. 30. Details of the alleged plot and its discovery were not disclosed However, it was understood that the conspiracy was actually dis covered on Nov. 30. 1 The dispatches speculated that Castro had advance knowledge of the plot when he visited Santiago to commemorate the landing of his invasion forces and the begin ning of the revolt against former dictator Fulgencio Batista in 1956. The revolutionary tribunal sit ting in judgment on Matos recess ed at 2 o'clock Saturday morning after a three and one-half hour statement by the major. He told the court that missing Army Commander Maj. Camilo Cienfuegos had shared his con cern over Communist infiltration in the revolutionary army and government. Matos was arrested in mid-October after writing a letter of res ignation to Prime Minister Fidel Castro because of his opposition to the steady leftist trend in the revolutionary government. He was then serving as military comman der of Camaguey Province. JAMES C. CHANCE Merrill, Oregon INSURANCE COMPANY LttabUtktd IBM a WsniM a Miha Dtih Candidate, Denies It "We're busy with our homework," Johnson says. But Johnson doesn't have to stay up late at night to discover this (act of political life: Since the Civil War, the door of the Whit House has been locked tight against all Southerners. Johnson knows it, and Johnson resents it. His resentment shows up in such comments as this one made while he was speaking up for ad ditional civil rights legislation. "We must purge ourselves of all bigotry, whether it's against a majority or a minority, whether it's against a class or a section." Here Johnson paused significant ly. "And I'd like to emphasize 'section.' " Johnson probably will go to th national nominating convention next summer with a good lineup of Southern votes, as well as oth ers he will pick up in the Moun tain and Western states. The convention should be a hum- dinger. If it should come to an uproar ious stalemate, a man of great" persuasive powers, who knows when to move and when to lia low, might make great progress. A hundred-year tradition might be broken, and then Lyndon John son could stride as a full-fledged candidate up the path that leads toward the White House. But now it's foolish to butt one's head against a tightly locked door. If his great friend and teach er, Speaker Sam Rayburn, wants to start Johnson - for - president clubs all over Texas, why not hu mor him? And there's no harm traveling about meeting the folks, is there? It turns out a lot of folks ara curious about Lyndon. He had overflow crowds wherever h spoke in Iowa and Kansas. Here, in a Republican strong hold, he drew 350 to a dinner in the Tallcorn Hotel. It was tha largest Democratic turnout her in history. When speaking to service clubs, Johnson takes the high road, with a ..few. cleverly constructed de tours. He speaks of the great need for responsible leadership in this country. Then he mentions how, as majority leader, he never op poses anything merely because it's proposed by a Republican president. "If this proposal is good for America," he will say, "it's good for the Democratic Party." Only a dullard could fail to un derstand here that before them is a shining example of responsible leadership. At these meetings h refers to President Eisenhower of ten and kindly. But at political meetings John son can become almost as free wheeling a critic as Hairy S.. Tru man. True, he remains pleasant in his attitude toward Eisenhower, but now he may get in a few jabs. He will be talking about the So viet Union's Nikita S. Khrushchev, how forceful he is, how deter mined. "I didn't see a man who needed a siesta in the afternoon," he will say. This is a not too gentle remind er that Eisenhower sometimes sleeps during the day, and the impression left on the audience is that Johnson, who had a heart attack of his own in 1955, will never be caught napping. Here in the farm belt Johnson naturally hits hard at the farm policies of Secretary of Agricul ture Ezra Taft Benson. But ha also blames the administration for high interest rates, for a lag in missiles, for What he calls the dis repair of our foreign alliances. "The Republican party," he says, "has already settled for sec ond place in the world." , In nearly all of his speeches ' Johnson slips in a sentence that . comes out about like this: "Let's keep our eyes on tha stars and do the possible." It s too early to say what's pos sible or impossible. But no mat ter what he says, you can bet that Lyndon Johnson has his eyes on the political stars shining so tempt' ingly over the White House. '.A fc MM" f -r: I aw. J . r 1 l LIFB'ACCIDINT'aiCKNB-M 1 Arizona Ntvid a Nawil