Mayers Dccsf Morale
BERLIN (AP)-The mayors of
21 American cities came to Berlin
today to boost the morale of the
beleaguered city.
The 21 mayors and two of their
wives arrived in a Pan American
World Airways flight from Frank-
furt 40 minutes behind schedule,
due to the late arrival of their
transatlantic plane.
The group was headed by Mayor
HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls, Ore.
Sunday, October 1, 1961
PAGE -A
Death Toll
Reaches 362
SALEM (AP) - Two cars met
head-on between Salem and Dallas
Friday night, lulling a mother and
daughter, to bring Oregon's traf
fic toll for the year to 362, in the
Associated Press count.
Police said Mrs. Virginia Gil
more. SO, Dallas, and her
daughter, Mrs. Deloris Marie
Kohler, 31, Eugene, apparently
were killed outright.
The crash happened about 11
p.m. Friday 6 miles west of
Salem on the Dallas-Salem high
way. A car driven by Clarence
Lavone McCoy, 49, Salem, started
to turn left off the highway, police
said, when the sports car driven
by Mrs. Gilmore, coming in the
opposite direction, smashed Into
it.
The deaths brought the highway
fatality total for September to 55.
with one day remaining in the
month.
School Boards
Meet Jointly
Joint meeting of Districts f and
2 in the city school system will be
held Monday at 7:30 p.m. in the
KUHS cafeteria.
On the agenda is the hearing of
delegations and petitions, opening
of bids, reports of commit
tees on sick leave and gasoline
and the superintendent's report.
TV Reports
To Be Made.
DUNSMUIR A progress report
on a TV translator system pro
posed by the Key Club will be
given at the club's meeting Mon
day night, Judge A. A. Smith,
president, has announced.
Permission to advertise plans
for establishment of a translator
antenna has been given the club
by the Federal Communications
Commission and the Key Club
hopes to provide TV reception by
antenna for all of Dunsmuir by
the first of the year.
Haydon Burns, of Jacksoift ille,
Fla., president of the United
States 'Conference of Mayors.
Burns said the mayors carried
telegrams from 572 other Ameri
can mayors, assuring the West
Berliners of the wholehearted sud-i
port of the American people.
The telegrams were to be hand
ed to West Berlin Mayor Willy
Brandt at the city hall later Sat
urday-
The American military com
mand in Berlin delegated four of
ficers to conduct the mayors on
their two-day visit, which will in-i
elude a bus tour of Communist
East Berlin Sunday.
A pretty American field service
exchange student from Berlin
Carola Ilisch, 18, came to the air
port on her own initiative to bring
a bunch of flowers and a personal
welcome to John Duncan, mayor
of Knoxville, Tenn., where she
spent most of the past year.
I went to the same church as
Mayor Duncan," she told news
men. "I wanted to make some
small gesture to show what Amer.
lea means to us."
Newsmen and photographers
gathered around the plane as the
mayors arrived. One of the group,
Mayor Frank F. McDonald, of I
Evansville, Ind., made a bad
start: He dropped his movie cam.
era as he was filming his first
view of Berlin. The camera turn.
bled down the steps and was
damaged.
Sen. Paul Hertz, head of West
Berlin's economics affairs, warm.
ly shook hands with Mayor Lester j
L. Bates, of Columbia, S. C, and
said, "I know North Carolina very
well. I'm afraid I don't know so
much about South Carolina."
Bates grinned and said: "Well.
I'll tell you all about it."
Mayor Hershel Lashkowitz of
Fargo, N. D., wrote under the
city on his name card "The home
of Roger Maris" in big letters.
Who's that?" a German pho
tographer asked.
Mayor Burns said: "This is not
a pleasure trip. We have a spe-j
cific mission. Vice President Lyn
don B. Johnson has been here to!
bring assurances to the people of
Berlin from the administration,
Gen. Lucius D. Clay represented
the military, and we have come
to speak for the American peo
ple.
He said the group would leave
for Munich early Monday and is
scheduled to return to New York
on Wednesday.
Pocahontas
Meeting Held
WEED Wabeno Council, No.
231, degree of Pocahontas held a
regular meeting Sept. 15 at White
Pine Hall with Virginia Anderson
serving as acting Pocahontas.
Delegate award for the evening
was presented to Mrs. Rachael
D o u h t y. Refreshments were
served by Mrs. Nella Wade and
Mrs. Dorothy Sottana.
NEWPORT, R.I. (AP) The
Kennedy administration is work
ing up a campaign to sell its
home-front legislative program1
and find out what else the country
wants done. j
Under the plan now developing.
teams of government experts willj
go into a number of major cities
to confer with state and local of
ficials and to conduct seminars on
such bread-and-butter issues as
Democrats
Plan Dinner
ALTURAS Modoc County Dem
ocrats are making final plans
for their annual dinner Oct. 7
when Gov. Edmund G. Brown will
be guest speaker.
The event in Veterans Memorial
Hall will mark the first time a
governor has visited Alturas in 21
years, the last gubernatorial visit
to Modoc County being made in
1940 when Culbert Olson was gov
ernor.
Erin Forrest, Modoc Central
Committee chairman, is urging
all interested people to attend
the dinner which will be attended
by Mrs. Brown as well as Modoc
County's congressional and state
representatives.
ON t- 7-10-43
69-71-83-90
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APR. 21
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Your Daily Activity Guida M
According to tht Stan.
To develop messoge for Monday,
read words corresponding to numbers
of your Zodiac birth sign,
t Restrain 31 Good
2 Consider 32 Ne
33 Will
34 Or
35 Of
36 Phably
37G'r
38 Kilt
39 Doy
40 And
41 B
42F-r
43 Attilud
44 A'f
45 Bmeficiot
i(S Due
47 An
4fl Tim
49 Contention
50 Two
51 Influence
52 True
53 Unuiool
54 rteit
55 Voor
56 On
5?
5 Maturt
5? For
60 Quarrets
LIBRA .
SEPT. 23 ryr
OCT. 23 44
3r-48-59-65(Ci
76-77-84-89 V
61 (Jove-moVing
6: Buck
63 Be tort
64 B.rd
65 A
66 Purpose
67 A;t
68 Them
(,9 Tr0'd
70 OuKkly
71 Peopl
72W.tn
73 Seeking
74 L.keiv
75 Chonnelf
76 Tr-p
77 V.i.t
7R And
79 For
80 A
81 Menlol
82 favor
83 In
84 N
8SO"
8? Retuits
?s Stone
85 Pio:m
90 Authority
3 Adiutt
4 Money
5 Youriilf
6 Surprises
7A
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9 Price
10 Rebellious
11 You
12 Stick
13 Pov
U Don't
15 To
16 Finoncigl
17 Tried
li Allow
19 Try
20 Your
21 To
22 Inter,.
23 Oongei
24 Hone
25 Mind
26GVod
27 Oon t
26 En,oy
29 To
30 No
SCOMIO
OCT. 24 1 42j
NOV. 22
19-21-38-501
164-72-85-88
SAGITTARIUS
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"They went thataway!
Home-Fronf Legislative
Programs Get 'Hard-Sell'
U.S., Reds
Make Plans
VIENNA. Austria (AP) The
chairman of the U.S. Atomic En
ergy Commission disclosed today
that the United States and the So
viet Union are discussing plans
to join forces in building the
world's biggest nuclear accelera
tor to produce the fantastic
power of 500 to 1,000 billion
electrovolts. N
Glenn T. Seaborg, chief U.S.
delegate to the conference of the
International Atomic tnergy
Agency here, said the Russians
in private talks with American
scientists have indicated their in
terest in cooperating. '
Nuclear accelerators are atom-
smashers needed to determine
hitherto unknown structural parts
of the atom s core.
The United States last month
inaugurated the biggest existing
accelerator in the Brookhaven,
Long Island, N.Y., laboratories,
one producing 30 billion electro-
volts. The biggest Soviet accelera
tor produces 10 bev.
Seaborg told newsmen the two
countries also are seeking to co
operate in other fields of peaceful
use of the atom, such as radioac
tive waste disposal methods and
common research on fast re
actors. This cooperation comes
under a 1959 agreement concluded
between the then AEC chairman,
John McCone, and his So
viet counterpart, Prof. V a s i 1 y
Emelyanov.
unemployment compensation and
housing.
They will discuss legislation
passed by Congress this year and
its effect on host communities.
They also will ask for suggestions
measures the -administration
should back in the 1962 session
Cabinet officers and top agency
heads, but not President Kennedy
personally, will participate. Theyl
will be chosen for their knowledge
of each topic: school aid, urban
development, help for ' distressed
areas, employment and perhaps
taxes, in addition to housing,
compensation and the like.
Of necessity, the operation will
advertise the administration's
program and possibly encourage
support of proposals which the
1961 Congress rejected but which
Kennedy would like to revive.
Democratic governors and other
party leaders are being sounded
out on the plan, it was learned.
while Kennedy vacationed here
with his family.
The idea of putting administra
tion teams on tour avowedly grew
from the contention of Kennedy
aides that despite a sharp setback
on school assistance and the wa
tering down of other proposals.
a good deal of worthwhile legis
lation was enacted this year. Ap
parently it also stemmed from a
hope of building support or tak
ing the public pulse on measures
the administration will put up in
a congressional election year,
Salem Builder
Given Contract
SALEM. (AP) A contract to
build a school addition and 25-
boy cottage at MacLaren School
for Boys. Woodburn, was awarded
Friday by the state board of
control to contractor Robert Mor
row, Salem.
Morrow's low bid was opened
Friday by the board and totaled
$299,240. There were six other
bids.
The board also authorized the
demolition of Grover Hall, un
occupied and unsafe cottage at
the school which the legislature
directed be removed when new
facilities were provided.
Highway 99
Work Told
By Expert
WEED The next highway con
struction project on U.S. 99 will
probably begin at the former 99
Ranch comer (Edgewood Junc
tion), Herbert Miles, engineer Di
vision of Highways, Redding, told
Weed Chamber of Commerce
members Tuesday, "as there will
be less interchange problems fac
ing the construction progress in
that section."
He retracted a request for a
public hearing here in October
for discussion of U.S. 99 here.
Policies and procedures for
freeway development were out-i
lined to the chamber group and
he staled the contracts to com
plete the U.S. Highway 99 free
way construction to the Oregon
border must be let by 1969.
Theenlarged aerial map of the
proposed route from Springhill
north of Mount Shasta to north
of Weed is now on display at the
Weed City Hall for study by local
residents.
Harold Campbell, president,
asked for suggestions regarding
chamber assistance in promot
ing the proposed override tax for
the junior college district which
would permit building and im
provements.
A tour by chamber members
of the College of the Siskiyous
was suggested as a means to de
termine the needs of the 280 stu
dents schooling in space planned
for 200.
The chamber will study a plan
to register all eligible voters in
the city limits. A vote to extend
honorary membership to W. E
Roberts, College of the Siskiyous
president, was approved.
Community CcdemiaMw Asked On Aid
To Dependent Children
Sl'NDAY
JOB'S DAUGHTERS,
61, 3 p m
Temple.
practice, Scottish Rite
ALTAMONT EXTENSION UNIT,
BETIIKL 10 a m., fairgrounds, Joan's Kitch-
Three Hurt
In Accident
YREKA Capt. C. J. McAlister,
commander of the Yreka area
California Highway Patrol of
fice, reported a three-car accident
occurring on Highway 139, 500
feet south of the East-West Road
at Tulelake Wednesday morning
Driver of the first vehicle, Clif
ford Jenkins, 52, Tulelake, mana
ger of the Tulelake Growers' As
sociation, was driving north on
Highway 139, and had stopped for
a maintenance crew working on
the road.
The second vehicle driven by
George A. Smith, 46, 2405 Sum
mers Lane, Klamath Falls, also
driving north, stopped behind the
first vehicle. The third automo
bile driven by William B. Noble,
64, Eugene, did not stop but
crashed into Smith's car, which in
turn crashed into the vehicle driv
en by Jenkins.
Injuries were sustained by No
ble, and his wile, Mary, 67, and
her twin sister, Mildred Dugan.
The three were transported to the
Klamath Valley Hospital for treat
ment, with the two women being
admitted and Noble being re
leased. All three vehicles were
heavily damaged.
McAlister said no citation had
been made as yet, pending fur
ther investigation.
MONDAY
ELXALONA CHAPTER. DAR,
8 p.m., home of Mrs.-Julian Acer.
Slides of early Klamath Falls by
Bert C. Thomas.
LUC1LE O'NEILL SCHOOL
PTA. 7:30 p.m., library. Organiza
tional meeting.
NEIGHBORS OF WOODCRAFT,
8 p.m., members will be notified
of meeting place.
HENLEY JOB'S. BETHEL 31
7:30 p.m., Henley Grange Hall.
JOB'S DAUGHTERS, BETHEL
61, 6 p.m. potluck dinner, 7:30
p.m. meeting. Scottish Rito Tem
ple. Official visit and inspection
of Jean Yeo, past grand guardian.
DEGREE OF HONOR, 8 p.m.
regular business meeting, City Li
brary.
TUESDAY
AMERICAN LEGION AUXIL
IARY Unit No. , 8 p.m., Legion
Hall. Sewing for gift shop, plans
for Veterans Day and member
ship drive.
MIDLAND HOME EC CLUB,
1:30 p.m. Nellie Motschenbacher,
Lower Klamath Lake.
Legislators
Tour Area
MONTAGUE A week-long tour
of Northern and Central Califor
nia will be made by California
congressmen and Sen. Clair En-
gle, starting Oct. 9, according to
Congressman Harold T. (Bizz
Johnson.
The congressional group will re
port on accomplishments of Con
gress in 1961 during the swing
through the state. Congressman
Johnson said the federal legisla
tors will leave Washington soon
after final adjournment of Con-,
gress for this year.
He said the tour will bring
California's inland congressmen
and Senator Engle home to re
port directly to the people on
progress on President Kennedy's
legislative program.
en. Demonstration, Quick Bnds.
Bring table service.
FALCON HEIGHTS SCHOOL
PTA. 7:30 p.m., cym. Program
by Public Health Department,
REBKKAIIS PAST NOBLE
Grands Club, 12:30 p.m. potluck
Mrs. Vera Clcmmens, Ashland
Highway.
AMERICAN LEGION AUXILI
ARY, 8 p m. regular meeting. Le
gion Hall.
ORION'S CLUB.
York, 2347 Vine.
8 p.m., Leona
WEDNESDAY
MIDLAND GRANGE. 8 p.m,
regular meeting, Midland Grange
Hall.
ZULEIMA NILE CLUB,
luncheon, Willard Hotel.
1 p.m
TOPS,
Chapter,
Lounge.
GIRDLES AWAY WITH
7:30 p.m.. Community
SALEM (AP) - The Yamhill,
County Welfare Commission
asked the Slate Welfare Commis
sion Friday to put a $300 monthly
ceiling per family on aid to
dependent children.
A resolution passed by the Yam-,
hill County Commission was for-!
warded to the state commission
by Norman Riley of McMinnville,
chairman of the Yamhill commis
sion. Under a temporary program
recently approved by Congress,
children of unemployed persons
will come under the welfare aid
to dependent children program.
This amendment passed by Con
gress is effective Oct. 1 through
June 30,1962.
"We cannot understand how an
NOW YOU KNOW
By United Press International
The proper name of novelist
George San was Aurore Dude-
rant (born Dupin).
unemployed, unskilled father, who
can receive from public assistance "
tor six or seven months out of
the year more than he can earn,
will have incentive to find em
ployment on a year round basis
at a lesser amount," the reso
lution said.
"Public opinion, when the im
pact of this amendment is
realized, will be so aroused that
the entire public assistance pro
gram for all categories will suffer.
The Yamhill commission said
it does not oppose aid to needy
persons but that it desires that
the aid be within the realm of
reality.
Acting Stats Welfare Adminis
trator Andrew F. Juras told the
commission the state could not
create two standards for ADC
payments. He said that because
much of the money comes from
federal grants that it probably
would not be legally possible to
change the aid payments and
qualify for the federal funds.
Servicemen
Tell Activity
ALAMEDA James H. Tucker,
aviation structural mechanic sec
ond, USN, son of Mrs. Eldrcd
Hansen of 2350 Reclamation Ave
nue, Klamath Falls, returned
Sept. 28 from an eight-month
cruise in the Far East. He is
stationed aboard the carrier USS
Midway.
Ronald G. Wililams, 26, husband
of Damaris Williams, 320 Division
Street, Klamath Falls, was re
cently promoted to sergeant in the
U.S. Army while serving jn Ger
many.
Williams entered the Army in
February, 1959, and arrived over
seas in November, 1960. He at
tended school in Crescent City.
Override
Tax Backed
DUNSMUIR The proposed 50
cents override tax for Siskiyou
County's Junior College district
was endorsed by the 25th district,
California Congress of Parents and
Teachers, at its September meet
ing and fall workshop at the
Church of Latter Day Saints in
Mount Shasta on Wednesday, Sep
tember 27.
Eddie Roberts, president of the
College of the Siskiyous, was
guest speaker at the luncheon
session. Roberts explained the
pressing needs of COS for more
classrooms, library, dormitories,
gymnasium and administration
buildings.
He cited the growing enrollment
and the heavy dependency of the
California education system on
junior colleges.
"A bond issue or a tax are the
only ways we have to raise mon
ey and the override tax will put
less of a burden upon tne tax
payer," Roberts said. He also em
phasized that the override tax
proposal is limited for six years.
A motion for endorsement was
made by Edna Barr and seconded
by Peggy "Walsh. The vote taken
by written ballot was 35 for and
eight opposed.
The afternoon session was de
voted to a panel discussion on
juveniles and their problems.
Panelists were Mrs. u. u. to
wards of San Diego, director of
public welfare, California Con
gress of Parents and Teachers;
Mrs. Howard Baugh of Redding,
C.C.P.T. recreation chairman;
and Mrs. Everett Barr of Yreka,
C.C.P.T. homemaking education
chairman.
Workshops were held on Par
ent and Family Life, Program
Planning. Education, Extension,
Parent and Family Life, Hospi
tality and Publicity.
GOWN ABLAZE
CATANZARO, Italy (AP)-Fcl-
icia Calafati, 33, tried to set a rat
afire Friday and wound up in a
hospital with severe burns.
Police said she had a habit of
capturing raU with a trap, bath
ing them in alcohol and setting
them afire. But one got away
from her and set her gown ablaze.
D3ey, Mom!
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