O
HERALD AND NEWS. Klamath Falls.' Ore.
Sunday. March 13. lflfiO
PACE S C
CHURCH DIRECTORY
For week-day services, please call the church of your choice
KLAMATH FALLS
MINISTERIAL ASSOCIATION
Lee Shafer. paitor. Suburban Chris
tian Church. prriideni, John Peder
eon, uperintendent, Klamath Kalli Goa
pel Million, vice prendent; Wilhur E.
Hrumnaugn, pa.tor. Chuitli ui tne
Brethren, iecrrlary-trei.i.urer. Lunch
eon bustnru meetings will be held the
Iiril weaneRdav ol each month
noon at the Willard Hotel.
KLAMATH GOSPEL MISSION
Purpoie of th mlmon u rearhlni
"Th L.it, The Least, and the Loit"
junn reaerten, director
B23 Walnut Street Ph. TU 2-4893
Foat Office Box 87 Klamath Falli
e30 a.m. Broadcast on Station
KFLW Monday through
Saturday
T:3fl p.m. Nightly preaching
:5 a.m. Broadcast on KFJI, Mon
day through Friday
SALVATION ARMY
400 Ktamalh Avenue - Ph. TO 4-fi9fll
Major and Mrs. M. Lewn Kendoll,
Officer! in Charge,
Sunday:
9 4.1 Sunday School
11:00 Hollneaa Meeting
7:fio Street Servic
T:30 F.VAngeltstic Meeting
ASSEMBLY Oh GOD
746 Oak Street
Rev. Lloyd Fourier
Sunday Schedule
:30 a.m. "The Voice of Revi
Station KFLW
t 45 a.m. Sunday School
11:00 a.m. Worship Service
8.10 p.m. Chrnt'a Ambauadori
7:30 p.m. Evangeliitie Rally
BIBLE BAPTISi
Comtervatlve Baptist Assoc.
344 Wiard Phone TU 4-4841
Rev. Freeman Schmitt
0:4ft a.m. Sunday School
11:00 a.m. Morning Worihip
6:00 p.m. BaptJt League
t;00 p.m. Evening Service
CALVARY BAPTIST
K. Main and Garden
R'ev. Grady E. Eitea
MS a.m. Sunday School
11:00 a.m. Morning Worship
:1S p.m. Training Union
1:30 p.m. Evening Worship
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
th and Washington Phone TU 4-6271!
Dr. E. M. Causey, pastor
Mr. and Mrs. George Casey
Education and Music
:45 a.m. Sunday School
.11:00 a.m. Morning Worship
0:45 p.m. Training Union
T;00 p.m. Evening Worship Strr
Ice
FIRST FREEWILL
BAPTIST CHURCH
Corner Shasta Way and Maditoai
Pastor Rev. Virgil Florence
Phone TU 2-4519
10:00 a.m. Sunday School ,
11:00 a.m. Morning Worship
7:90 p.m. Evening Worship
GRACE MISSIONARY
BAPTIST CHURCH
;ty Library Basement Auditorium
Elder J. v, uiancnara, pastor
4735 Harlan Drive, parsonage
Ph. TU 2-0120
10 on a.m. Sunday School
11:00 a.m. Sunday Worship Service
7:00 p.m. Sunday Bible Study
IMMANUEL BAPTIST
CONSERVATIVE
The Rev. L. J. (Ron l Hal)
11th and High Phone TU 4-M34
0:45 a.m. Sunday School
11:00 a.m. Worship Service
11:00 p.m. Young People's
7:00 p.m. Evening Service
MISSIONARY BAPTIST
4134 Douglas
Elder J. L. Wisdom
414.1 Balsam Phone TU 2-3648
9:4.1 a.m. Sunday School
11:00 a.m. Morning Worship
7:00 p.m. Training Union
i:0O p.m. Sunday Evening Service
STEWART-LENOX BAPTIST
K. G. West. Pastor
Comer Douglas and Emerald
Phone TU 2-0566 '
:4.1 a.m. Sunday School
11:00 a.m. Morning Worship
6:30 p.m. B.T.U.
7:30 p.m. Evening Worship
ST. PIUS X
CATHOLIC CHURCH
Rev. George A. Murphy, pastor
4WW Bristol Ave. Phone TV 4-4242
7:30 9 11 a.m. T.JO p.m. Mast
SACRED HEART CATHOLIC
CHURCH
Rirht Rev. T. P. Casey. Pastor
III 5 High St. TU 4-45W
Sunday Masses: 7, '8, 9:30, 11, 12:15;
T.M) p.m.
Weekday Masnes: 7 and 8 AM
Saturday Confessions 3-4:110 and 78:30
FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Otis R, Bell, pastor
th 4s Pine Phone TU 4-5432
9:45 a.m. Bible School
11:00 a.m. Morning Worship
0:30 p.m. Adult Bible Study
4:30 p.m. Christian Endeavor
7:30 p.m. Evening Worship
SUBURBAN CHRISTIAN CHURCH
SMS Shasta Way
Lee Shafer. Minister
9:45 a.m. Sunday School
0:30 p.m. Bible Study ACE
11:00 a.m. Worship Service
7:30 p.m. Evening Service
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
10th and Washington Ph. TU 4-RH28
Reading Room 51fl Main Street
Phone TU 4-5797
11:00 a.m. Sunday School
11:00 a.m. Sunday Service
CHURCH OF THE BRETHREN
Wilbur E. Brumbaugh, Pastor
427.1 Bristol Ave. TU 2-4057
9:45 a.m. Church School
11:00 a.m. Morning Worship
0:30 p.m. Youth Feilowrhtps Child
care
CHURCH OF CHRIST
1774 Arthur Phone TU 2-1140
10.00 a.m. Bible Claries
11:00 a.m. Lord's Supper
7:30 p.m. Bible Study
CHURCH OF CHRIST
2205 Wantland Ave.
10:00 a.m. Bible Study
11:00 a.m. Worship Service
7:30 p.m. Evening Service
Curb Production
Says Spud Boss
FEDMOND (AP) The exe
cutive di.cctor of .(he National
Potato Council urged the Central
Oregon Potato Growers organiza
tion not to increase their produc
tion. A. E. Mercker told the grow
ers' recent' annual meetitfj that
they had done a niceob last year
in cutting down the number of
acres planted to help bring a 5
per cent reduction across the
country.
Mercker said yields were Son I
bout 7 per c8itoind because of
this the average price was $1.81
per hundred weight, compared to
$1.19 a hundred weight the year
bfor. 0
PENTECOSTAL CHURCH OE GOD
Pastor W. A. Durham
4(137 Shasta Way Phnne TU 3-4993
9 45 a.m. Sunday Scnool
11 00 a m Morning Worship
7:30 p.m. Evangelistic Service
THE CHURCH OF GOD
OF PROPHECY
Altamont and Maryland Street
J. M. Judd. Pastor
in 00 m. Sunday School
11 00 a m Morning Worship
7.00 p.m. Young People's VLB Senr
ice
7:30 pm Evangelistic Service
FIRST CHURCH OK GOD
2802 Altamont Drive
T. Charles and Irene Buckle, pastors
9:45 a m Sunday School
10:4.1 a.m. Church Services
11:20 a.m. Junior Church tyoutb
room i
6:41 p m. Youth Fellowship
6 45 p.m. Children's Hour
7:30 pm. Evangelistic Service
CONGREGATIONAL
CHURCH
Rev. Marshall A MfKinnle. pastor
2154 Garden St. Phnne TU 2-3376
9:30 a.m. Church School
11:00 a.m. Worship Service
6:30 p.m. Pilgrim Youth Fellowship
ST. PAUL'S EPISCOPAL
Eighth and Jefferson
The Rev. Robert L. Greene. Rector
TU 4-35H5
8 INI a m. Holy Communion
915 a m. Church School
9:15 a.m. Family Worship 'Holy Com
munmn third Sunday)
11:00 a.m. Morning Worship (Holy
Communion first Sunday
7:00 p.m. Epincopal Young Church
men
FAITH TABERNACLE
Rev. W. D. Bigby, pastor
2610 Shasta Way
10 00 a m Sunday School
11.00 a.m. Morning Worship
6.30 p.m. Young People's Meeting
7:30 p.m. Evening Worship
GOSPEL MISSION
OF THE UNITED HOLY
CHURCH OF AMERICA
251 Commercial Street
Rev. C. M. Tlmmi, pastor
10:00 a.m. Sunday School
11:00 a.m. Morning Worship
6:30 p.m. Sunday Young People's
service
7:30 p.m. Sunday Evening Service
KLAMATH FALLS
FREE METHODIST CHURCH
1918 Orecon Avenue
C. O. Tremain, pastor Ph. TU 4-6682
9:45 a.m. Sunday School
11:00 a m. Morning Worship
6 30 p.m. Y P Service
7:00 p.m. Evening
Servlee
KINGDOM HALL
3:00 p.m. Sunday, leclure
4:15 p.m. Sunday, Watchtower I
dy
KLAMATH TEMPLE
1007 Pine Phone TU 4-6325
Rev. Harry M. Slrachan
9:45 a.m. Sunday School
11:00 a.m. Morning Worship
6:30 p.m. Overcome r Service
6:30 p.m. Sunday, C. A. Young Peo
ple
7:30 p m. Sunday Evening Worship
7:45 p.m. Evangelistic
KLAMATH GOSPEL CENTER
1625 Mitchell Phone TU 2-0720
Rev. Melvln R. Gritfith
10:00 a.m. Sunday School
11:00 a.m. Sunday Morning Worship
7:30 p.m. Sunday Night Worship
CHURCH
OF JESUS CHRIST
OF LATTER DAY SAINTS
Home and Martin Phone TU 4-4855
Klamath Falls First Ward
Bishop David J. Davie
Phone TU 4-7327
7:50 a.m. Sunday, Priesthood Meet
ing 9:15 a.m. Sunday School
5.30 p.m. Sunday Sacrament Services
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST
OF LATTER DAY SAINTS
Home and Martin Phone TU 4-4855
Klamath Falls Second Ward
Bishop Chas. Wesley Clark
Phone TU 4-7560
10:50 a.m. Sunday, Priesthood Meet
ing 12:15 D.m. Sunday School
7:30 p.m. Sunday Sacrament Services
REORGANIZED CHURCH
OF JESUS CHRIST
OF LATTER DAY SAINTS
9th and Plum
9:45 a.m. Sunday School
11:0(1 a.m. Morning Worship
7:30 p.m. Evening Worihip
HOPE LUTHERAN
South Sixth St. St Homedale
Rd.
Pacific Synod ULCA
Rev. Albert C. Neuhauer, Pastor
9:45 a.m. Sunday Church School
classes for all acei
11:00 a.m. Worship Service
KLAMATH LUTHERAN
1175 Crescent Avenue
Rev. LeRoy Redal, Pastor
9:30 a.m. Sunday School
9:30 and 11 a.m. Worship Services
1st Sundays Broadcast KFLW
at 11:00 a.m.
4th Sundays Holy Communion
ZION LUTHERAN
(The Lutheran Church-Missouri- Synod!
Eleventh and High Streets
Norbcrt E Dey, Pastor TU 4-6793
9:4.1 a.m. Sunday Bible School
11.00 e.m. Divine Service
"The Changeless Christ for
this Changing World
FIRST METHODIST CHURCH
Rev. Dallas McNeil
230 North 10th St. Phone TU 4-405?
9.45 a m Church School, Sunday
11:00 a.m. Service of Worship Sunday
7.30 pm Fellowship Hour. Sunday
7:00 p m. Youth Fellowship Sunday
Town Counsel
Has Problem
HARWICH. Mass. (AP) Is
Rodney O'Brien two cemetery
commissioners or one? And is
John Handren one, or just a pri
vate citizen?
That's the two-sided puzzler fac
ing town counsel Oscar J. Cahoon
today.
O'Brien got 1,301 voles in Tues
day's town election, but it turned
out he filed for the election a year
too early He still had a year of
his previous tlOee-year term to
serve. Cahoon must decide wheth
er he was legally elected and, if
so, whether he can serve two
terms at the sameolme
Handren, on the other hand, for
got to run for reelection and h0
was the term that expOed He got
37 write-in votes.
"We all thought it was my turn
to run for reelection, so I went
ahead and filed." said O'Brien.
CHURCH
OF THE NAZARENE
Garden and Martin Phone TU 4-4876
Rev L. Dow Wright
First Church
9 40 a m Sunday School
Id Ml a m ftunday Morning Worship
6 00 p.m. Sunday NYPS and Junior
Society I
7:00 p m. Sunday Evangelistic Serf-1
LAKESIDE NAZARENE CHURCH
Quarry and Acosta Streets
J. Loy Kerry. miniMer TU 4-5400
B 4.1 a m, Sunday School
II (Hi a m. Morning Worship
1.30 p.m. Bible Study. Sunday
7:00 p.m. Evangelistic Service
WEAVER MEMORIAL
PILGRIM HOLINESS CHURCH
Rev. James D. Rock holt
2301 Wantland Ph. TU 4-5584
R 4.1 a.m. Sunday School
11 On a m Morning Worship
S.:w) p.m. Youth Service
7.30 p.m. Evening Service
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN
601 Pine Street
Rev. Robert C. Groves, Minister
9:30 a.m. Chun-h School class (or
all ages
11:00 a.m. Worship Nursery and story
hour
5:30 p.m. Westminster Fellowship,
junior high and high school
MT. LAKI COMMUNITY
PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH
Andrew A. Jarvis, Pastor
Ph. TU 2-1210
9 4.1 a.m. Sunday School
11. on am Worship Service
7:00 p.m. Junior High and Junior
Youth Fellowship
PEACE MEMORIAL
PRESBYTERIAN
4431 S. 6th TU 4-5057
Klamath Falls. Oregon
Rev. Lalng W. Sibbet
9:30 a.m. Church School
9.30 a.m. Worship Service
11.00 a.m. Church School
110O a.m. Worship Service
7:00 p.m. Jr. at Sr. Westminster
Fellowships
ST. ANDREW'S
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
Corner of Nosier and Angle Streets
Three blocks from Pelican School
1:00 p.m. Sunday Church School
2:00 p.m. Worship Service
SEVENTH-DAY rtDVENTIST
1735 Main Phone TU 4-7826
Elder Ronald Kegley
9:30 a.m. Saturday Sabbath School
11:00 a.m. Saturday Morning Worship
UNITARIAN FELLOWSHIP
OF KLAMATH COUNTY
Fred Speer. President
TU 4-5017
10:30 a.m. Sunday church school In
the Summers Lane School
8:00 p.m. Tuesday, disrussinn meet'
log in the Congregational
Church aocial hall, 2154
Garden.
YOUTH SOLDIERS FOR CHRIST
1442 Oregon Ave.
Rev. Effie. Shelby
10:00 a.m. Sunday School
11:00 a.m. Morning Worship
7:45 p.m. Evening Worship
BEATTY
BEATTY METHODIST MISSION
The Rev. Harvey Zeller
10:30 a.m. Sunday School
11:30 a.m. Worship Service
BLY .
BLY CATHOLIC CHURCH
Rev. Patrick Lunham
11:00 a.m. Masa every Sunday
CHRISTIAN AND MISSIONARY
ALLIANCE BLY
George Simon, pastor Phone 511, Bly
9:4.1 a.m. Sunday School
11:00 a.m. Sunday Morning Service
6:30 p.m. Sunday Young Peoples
Meeting
7:30 p.m. Sunday Evening Service
BONANZA
BONANZA COMMUNITY
ASSEMBLY OF GOD
Rev. Forrest B. Bard
10:00 a.m. Sunday School
11:00 a.m. Morning Worship
7:30 p.m. Evening Service
ST F. X. CABRINI CATHOLIC
CHURCH
Bonanza
Rev. Geo, A. Murphy
11:00 a.m. Sunday Mass
CHILOQUIN
CHILOQUI-.N
ASSEMBLY OF GOD
Rev. Willi urn Rrnli
lO'OO a.m. Sunday School
11:00 a.m. Worship Service
6:30 p.m. Young People
7:30 p.m. Evangelical Meeting
OUR LADY OF MT. CAR MEL
CATHOLIC CHURCH
Chlloquin
Rev. Patrick Lunham
9:00 a.m. Sunday Mass
LATTER DAY SAINTS
CHILOQUIN MASONIC HALL
E. A. Brower, Supt
10:30 a.m. Sunday School
11:30 a.m. 1st Sunday each month -
Sacrament Meeting
CHILOQUIN METHODIST
COMMUNITY CHURCH
Rev. Donald L. Brown
10:00 a.m. Church School
11:00 a.m. Worship Service
CHILOQUIN OPEN BIBLE
STANDARD CHURCF
Cecil Dye. Pastor
10:00 a.m. Sunday School
.1:00 a.m. Worship Service
7:30 p.m. Evangelistic Service
Views Given
On Suggestions
LOS ANGKLES (AP) - A psy
chologist says sub-conscious sug
gestion can be achieved through
sound as well as sight.
Dr. Lawrence R. Zeitlin Sr. told
the Audio Engineering Society's
western convention Thursday that
tests prove sounds below the level
of conscious hearing can induce
certain involuntary menial re
actions. But once a subject learns
what is happening, he added, he
can no longer be thus stimulated
WANT OIL PROKITS
CAIRO (LT0 - Lebanon has
reiusea to allow the construction
ol a new oil pipeline through its
territory unless its oil-rich neigh
bors agree to share part ot their
profits with It and olhcro Arab
countries which have no such na
tural resource.
D0RRIS
FIRST FREEWILL
HAPT1ST CHURCH
North California si. Dorria. California
Rev. H- 0 Gentry Ph. EX 7-422J
in (to a m Sundav School
11:00 a m. Mornmf Worihip
7 00 pm. Vounc Penple'a Sarvlr
7.30 p.m. Evamni Woramp
OUR LADY OK G(HII) COUNSEL
CATHOLIC CHURCH
Dorria. California
nv. C r O'Connor, paalor
11:13 a m -Mm
FORT KLAMATH
FORT KLAMATH COMMUNITY
MF.THOD1ST CHURCH
Rev. Donald 1.. Brnwn
9 :tn a ni Morning Worihip
10. JO a m Sunday School
LANGELL VALLEY
ST. BARNABAS
EPISCOPAL CHURCH
Bill Milne, lay vk-ar
10:30 a.m. Morning Worship
Church School
LORELLA
LORELLA FULL (iOSPEL
Rev. Eugene A, Willis, Pastor
9 AS a m. Sunday School
11:00 a.m. Morning Worship
7.44 p.m. Sunday Evening Worship
MALIN
MALIN ASSEMBLY OF
.OD CHURCH
Charles L. Fuller, pastor
9:4!t a m. Sunday School
11:00 a.m. Morning Worship
7.00 p.m. Sunday Evening Worship
Visitors Welcome
MALIN COMMUNITY
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
Rev. Ethan Whitman
9:45 a.m. Sunday School
11:00 a.m. Worship Service (child
care for preschoolers In
Sunday School wing
MERRILL
MERRILL ASSEMBLY OF GOD
W. H. Reeve, Paster
10:00 a.m. Sunday School
11:00 a.m. Morning Worship
7:4ft p.m. Evangelistic Services
7:45 p.m. Wednesday, Young People's
bervice
ST. AUGUSTINE'S
CATHOLIC CHURCH
Merrill
Rev. John Pnelan
6:00 a m. Sunday Mass
10.00 a.m. Sunday Mass
MERRILL FIRST
PRESBYTERIAN
Rev. Lloyd A. Henderson
9:45 a.m. Sunday School
11:00 a m. Church
3:00 p.m. Sunday, Junior Youth Pel
town hip
6:30 p.m. Sunday, Senior Youth Fel
lowship
NEWELL
NEWELL
CONSERVATIVE BAPTIST
Howard W. Roth, pastor
9:4S a.m. Sunday School
11:00 a.m. Morning Worship
6:30 p.m. Training Union
7:30 pm. Evening Service
SPRAGUE RIVER
SPRAGUE RIVER FRIENDS
CHURCH
Pastor, Evert J. Tuning
10:00 a.m. Sunday School
11:00 a.m. Worship Service
7:.t0 n m .r.vMinf Service
7:30 p.m. Wednesday Prayer Meet
ing
9:43 a.m. Sunday School
TULELAKE
TULELAKE ASSEMBLY OF
GOD CHURCH
Pastor L. A. Lawrence
P.O. Box 365
Phone 7-0aai
Tulelake, California
9:4ft a.m. Sunday School
11:0 a.m. Morning Worship Service,
and Children's tnuren
C. A. Chapel '
6:45 p.m. Christ Ambassadors Strv-
ice lYnuthi
7:43 p.m. Evangelistic Service
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
Tom Helm. Pastor
9:4ft a.m. -Sunday School
11:00 a m. Morning Worship
6:30 p.m. Baptist Training Union
7:45 p.m. Evening Worship
HOLY CROSS
CATHOLIC CHURCH
Tulelake, California
Rev. C. F. O'Connor, pastor
fl:00 a m. Mass
9:30 a.m. Mass
CHURCH OF CHRIST
Tulelake, California
Rev. Roy Biggs
9:43 a m Bible School
11:00 a.m. Morning Service
6:30 p.m. Youth Meeting
7:30 p.m. Evening Service
( TULELAKE
COMMUNITY PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH
Tulelake, California
Rev. Wayne Wattman, Pastor
Phone, Church, 7-0643, Manse. 7-0641
9:4S a.m. Church Sunday School
11:00 a m. Morning Worship
6:30 p m. Westminster Fellowship
WILLIAMSON RIVER
WILLIAMSON RIVER
METHODIST MISSION
Rev. Harvey Zeller
3:30 p.m. Sunday School
3:30 pm. Worship Service
Fellowship Dinner af
Church
Study Shows
Cost Hikes
WASHINGTON (AP) A study
of the budget for the 1961 fiscal
year shows employment and pay
roll costs- rising in civilian agon
ties of the government, while
civilian employment in the De-
(ense Department is decreasing
The Senate-House Committee on
Reduction of Non-Essential Fed
eral Expenditures said the over
all trend is up. The committee
headed by Sen. Harry F. Byrd
D-Va), released the report today
Budgeted personnel requests
for executive branch agencies for
be "iscal yeare which starts July
1, include, average civilian cm
ploymenfof 2.385.35!) an8 payroll
costs of $12,800,000.0(10, the report
said.
In 1959. the last year (or which
actual head-count figures are
available, the tola! employment
figure was 2.313.243 and the pay
roll was 12,600,000,000. "
Expert Analyzes US Butget Trends
Kdilnr'i note: How much monev
is needed, and lor what purposes.
lo keep this country militarily
safe? Herewith K'lton C. Kay, long
an AP writer on military affairs.
wraps up the current debate.
By F.t.TON C, FAY
AP Military Affairs Writer
WASHINGTON iAPi With Die
debate on the size and nature oi
the military program lor next
year barely begun, demands are
being made to add up to (hrce
billion dollars to the defense bud
get proposed by President Eisen
hower.
The military appropriation bill
which Congress eventually passes
could he intluenced strongly by
international trends in the interim.
Among other matters, the suc
cess or failure of the scheduled
summit meeting of Soviet and
Western chiefs of state in April
and any developments in disarma
ment efforts could have their im
pact on what Congress, or indeed,
the administration, finally docs
about the amount of money and
the composition of defense forces.
Certainly, new adventures in
limited aggression by the Com
munist camp anywhere in the
world could intluence the pro
gram. Rut at the moment, President
Kisenhower is adhering firmly to
his proposal that military spend
ing be about 41 billion dollars, ap
pioximately the figure for the
present year.
But influential Democrats in
Congress say that more should be
spent for defense for missiles
and for other arms.
Sen. Henry .M. Jackson D
Wash) wants Congress to add
three billion dollars to the ad
ministration's military program.
He says he is confident the Senate
Exaggeration, Confusion
By CHARLES CORDDRY
and JOHN A. GOLDSMITH
WASHINGTON (UP1) Ameri
ca is militarily supreme today but
is heading into an era of great
danger as the rapid rise of Soviet
power continues.
That is a capsule conclusion
emerging from Ihe torrent ol
claims and counter-claims in the
election-year defense debate now
rampant in Congress.
Most of the debale has been
characterized by exaggerations.
confusion instead of clarification
and both political and military
maneuvering for advantage.
Sweeping assertions have been
used to make complex matters of
judgment seem like black and
white issues.
The debale nevertheless is driv
ing home the central fact that a
period of peril could lie just ahead
in Ihe arms race. Some reshuf
fling and possibly expansion of the
Kisenhower administration's new
defense budget seems likely in or
der lo sliffen measures for offset
ting Russia's missile superiority
in Ihe next three years.
Up to now, the millions of words
in the great debate seem to boil
down to these key points:
U.S. military power, right
now, is second to none. The Stra
tegic Air Command wilh its nu-
lear-armed jet bombers and mis
siles, comprising the main deter
rent to aggression, is so potent
that Russia would not dare to pro
voke its retaliatory blows.
JUST TAKE THE COOKIE, NOW Little Billy Leaptrott, 2, isn't fazed by the giraffe's monumental tongue in a Memphis,
Tenn., zoo. The animal spanned the last few inches to tike the cookie offered by Bill.
Evangelist Graham Was III,
CAIRO (UP1) Evangelist
Billy Graham disclosed today he
had fallen "seriously ill" wilh a
slomach ailment during the last
part of his six-week tour of Africa
but had recovered quickly.
The energetic young American
preacher did not define the na-
Fire Fought
In Fire House
BtOOMFIELD, Conn. 'AP)
Volunteer firemen were sum
moned to fight a fire in their own
fire house Thursday night.
Fire Chief Adolf P. Jacobsen
led his men inside, got behind the
wheel of the biggest truck and
drove it through the closed door.
The other four vehicles followed
to safety.
The fire roared out of control
(or0 about an hour, badly damag
ing the interior. The fire chief:
said damage might run to 110,000
There were no injuries, and the
cause of Ihe fire was unknown.
boost il by billion, and "1
think it should be more."
Sen. Richard Russell (D-Ga
says that like the President he
lawns a balanced budget but
"this must not he achieved at Ihr
expense of our military muscle.'
, On the House side, Hep. Clar
ence Cannon i)-Mo', chairman of
tho House Appropriations Comma
tee and a zealot in campaigning
a3c.in.st big government expend!
Hires, urges a boost in the mili
tary budget.
This debate over whether
enough money is being spent on
defense is not new. The executive
and legislative branches of gov
ernment have been wrangling
over it, annually, since there wa:
a government formed. Until now
the debates have been focused on
something Ilia! might happen on
distant battlefields or the sea. To
day the debate has a real, grim,
personal interest for the citizen.
The war may come crashing
down on his own home.
Missiles dominate the debate to
day. But the argument branches
out, also, lo embrace other weap
ons systems, some conventional,
some new.
It embraces, too, the methods
of assessing the probability of
war the technique of intelligence
evaluation.
The broad topics of debate in
clude these:
Sell. Stuart Symington (D-Moi
insists that "the facts are that a
substantial missiles gap does ex
ist and the administration appar
ently is going lo permit this gap
to increase."
Secretary of Defense Thomas
S. Gales Jr. concedes Ihe Soviet
I nion may have more missiles
than Ihe United Slates during the
next three years, but insists that
Russian power grows apace
however, and during the next
three year.s the Soviets will have
numerical superiority in the most
awesome weapon yet conceived,
the intercontinental ballistic mis-
He. They might come to believe
they could knock out America's
retaliatory power in a single, sur
prise attack.
During this missile gap. peri
od, America may have lo take
such extraordinary measures as
keeping a large portion of the
Strategic Air Command on contin
uous airborne alerl. That would
prevent its beinR destroyed on the
ground and serve notice on the
Kremlin that Russia could not es
cape retaliation.
The period of peril will be
temporary. During Ihe missile gap
era. America will be building to
ward a diversified dclerrent force
that is mobile, protected and cer
lain lo survive missile attack. It
will include Polaris missile sub
marines, the fast-liring Minute-
man intercontinental ballistic mis
sile based in underground launch
sites starting in 1!W3, and a vari
ety of military satellites lo gather
intelligence and give atlack warn
ing.
The debate swirls around these
key points and only sporadically
touches on other aspects of de
fense such as: Preparations for
more likely limited wars, anti-sub-marine
measures lo protect
against Russia's 450-sub fleet, ade
quacy of airlift to move troops
ture of the illness and said he felt
fine now.
Graham was affected by an eye
ailment last year but visited Aus
tralia with his mission despite the
fact Ihat doctors in the United
Slates told him to "slow down."
Graham arrived in Cairo from
Ethiopia Thursday at Ihe con
clusion of a nine-country speak
ing lour lhal left little time for
"slowing down." He was 10
pounds lighter than when he
started.
Pleased With" Results
The evangelist, dressed in a
slightly rumpled blue suit and
handsomely suntanned, indicated
phe was generally pleased with
the results of his lour and had
found Christian leadership in the
areas he visited to be "of a high
caliber."
Nevertheless, he conceded that
the Moslem religion was "grow
ing very rapidly" and said he
also had found "a revival of old
tribal religions."
"Many forces and ideologies are
he over-all deterrent strength of
Ihe I nited States in long-range
bombers, intermediate range mis
siles, ship-based planes, Polaris
submarines is greater.
The differences are not exclu
sively those between the admin
istration and Democratic critics
in Congress. The military leaders
themselves do not see eye lo eye.
Gen. Thomas Power, chief of
the Strategic Air Command, said
recently that, with no advance
missile warning system available,
the Soviet Union could ire only
JiKl ballistic mi.-siles and virtually
could wipe out the entire strike
force of the United Slates within
30 minutes. He said only half the
missiles would need lo be of inter
continental range. He wanted
more money lo keep some of his
strategic bombers in Ihe air at
all times.
Under questioning of a House
subcommittee. Gen. Thomas D.
White, Air Force chief of staff,
said Power did not necessarily
speak the views of the Defense
Department. And Eisenhower, in
a news conference, commented
about parochial views by ollicers
he did not mention by name.
Adm. Arleigh Burke, chief of
naval operations, told a commit
tee he believes the Navy should
he permitted lo start building six
more Polaris submarines now, at
a cost of about 075 million dollars,
in addition to the Ihrec which
would be provided under the ad
ministration's military budget.
But Gen. Nathan Twining, chair
man of the Joint Chiefs of Staff,
spoke out against such a speed-up
in the Polaris program.
Twining disagreed also with
Power's request for more money
for an airborne alert. Twining said
the budget provides for such an
Cloud Debate On Defense
about Ihe world in a hurry and
obsolescence of Navy combat
ships.
There is general agreement an
ur alert may be needed, but
wrangling over when it should be
started. The administration, sup
ported by the Air Force leader
ship, wants money to practico lor
it and lay in extra alrcralt en
gines and parts. SAC Commander
Gen. Thomas S. Power, backed
by Democratic critics of the ad
ministration, thinks there should
be a continuous air alert now
There is agreement, too, that
there will be a missile gap. He
publicans say it will be "moder
ate" and there will be no gap in
overall deterrent power. Dcmo-i
crats fear it could mean national
disaster at worst, and successful
Soviet diplomatic blackmail at
best.
The gap could be narrowed, or
closed, by more production of cur-
lent missiles, Ihe Alias and Titan.
The administration prefers In
await Ihe superior Minuleman. It
remains lo be seen whether Dem
ocrats will propose moro Alias
and Titan squadrons.
There is agreement Ihat Ihe
Polaris submarine program could
be slopped up. The Navy would
like lo double production, making
il six subs a year wilh 16 Polaris
missiles each. It has some Demo
cratic backing. The administration
wanls to await successful firingsl
of missiles from a submerged sub
marine to verify the sensational
But Says He's
battling for the minds of Afri
cans," said the Protestant preach
er, who al several points in his
religious safari had run into op
position from local witch doctors.
Once he was challenged by a
Moslem missionary to offer im
mediate and tangible proof of
Liquor Store
Victim Of Theft
CASTELLA Southern Pacific
Railway agents said Thursday
thieves broke into the Castella
Grocery and Liauor Store here
sometime between midnight Wed
nesday and 7 a.m. Thursday.
The burglars attempted lo rifle
a safe, but were unsuccessful,
agents reported. They took six
pair ot work trousers, three to
five pair of men's socks, four to
five pair of gloves, eight fifths
and four half pints of whiskey
and gin, from four to eight car
tons of cigarettes, and an undeter
mined amount of sausage, salami
and cheese.
,ilIPPW
U
V
alerl if and when one seems ad
visable, but that is far enough to
go at this time.
Rep. George Mahon D-Tex of
the House .Military Appropriations
subcommittee, said the money
proposed for an airborne alert
should be tripled.
The Army is unhappy about
money provided by the budget for
modernization, for preparing for
limited war and for development
of its Nike-Zeus antimissile mis
sile. It also questions Ihe ability
of Ihe Air Force to provide ade
quate airlift lor Army troops lo
meet limited or general aggres
sion. The Army would like lo spend
fiv e billion dollars per year for
three years to re-equip itself with
new arms and other materiel. It
is getting considerably less.
Gen. Lyman Lemnilzer, Army
chief of staff, (old a House Ap
proprialions subcommittee he fflt
that both (he number and the
inodernness of planes which Ihe
Air Force had for airlifting Army
troops was inadequate. Sen. Rus
sell said he was concerned about
(he airlift situation.
There is debate also about the
Navy's conventional weapons sys
tem situation. The Navy wants to
start building another new car
rier. Bui its original hope for mak
ing this carrier atomic powered,
like one now being built, was
quashed by the administration
when the estimated cost rose sub
stantially above 400 million dol
lars. The Navy now asks for a
conventionally powered carrier, lo
handle the new heavy, high speed
jels. Air Force Gen. White says
he opposes a new carrier, nuclear
or conventional; he contends the
percentage of added striking pow
er contributed by carriers in stra
tegic attack is "very, very small."
results it has had in land-based
firings. Then there may be
speedup.
In a related area, Ihe Air Force
would liko reinstatement of iu
B-70 bomber program. The admin
istration has cut the 2,000-mile an
hour plane lo a prototype project.
The Air Force, with some Demo
cratic backing, sees the plane as
a deterrent weapon which, like the
Polaris sub, could roam at will,
always ready to hurl ballistic mis
siles in retaliation lor aggression.
The B-70 cutback is widely re
garded as being chiefly an econ
omy move.
History suggests there will b
some shake-up and increase in
Eisenhower's budget when the
congressional appropriations com
mittees are finished wilh their
hearings and when the big debate
is over.
Last year, Congress voted the
President a net gain of $82,258,000
over what he asked for defense.
To arrive at Ihat net, however, it
eliminated $1129,561, (HW in adminis
tration money requests and added
$l,f)ll,81J,ot)0 in its own proposals.
This year, the difference be
tween what the military depart
ments wanted in new money and
what Ihe President asked Con
gress lo provide amounts to ''
M.338,000,000, a cut of 7,6 per cent
in service requests. The total mili
tary appropriation proposal was
$43,915,000,0(10 and the administra
tion cut it to $40,577,000,000 before
sending the request to Congress.
Okay Now
Jesus' teaching that faith can
move mountains.
Cites Obitacle
Graham said one of the main
blocks to the spread of Christian
ity in Africa was the belief of
many natives fostered by colon
ialism that Jesus was a Eu
ropean. "I told them Christ belongs to
Africa as much as he docs lo any
other part of the world," Graham
said.
Graham described the Africans'
identification of Christianity with
Europeans as an "unfortunate
thing." He said the rise of Islam
and tribal cults "is going paral
lel with nationalism.
He said he planned to fly to
Amman, Jordan, Monday and then
visit Jerusalem.
OSBURN HOTEL
IUGENI, ORt.
J. B. Earlar io larlar J.
Praprlalara
Thersufhly Medern