Fair Slues
Up Crater
Lake Visits
Excellent fall weather conditions
nave been conducive to increased
visitation at Crater Lake National
. Park, according to figures recent
ly released by Superintendent W.
Ward Yeager. Despite road re
construction, between Annie Spring
and Rim Village, park travel lias
gone up over 1960 figures.
As of Sept 30, 388,261 visitors,
reflecting almost a nine per cent
increase over the comparable
nine-month period last year, wee
recorded. During the month of
September 51,810 persons depict
ed a. large increase of 25 per cent
over the same month In 1930.
Visitors day use, which reflects
total daily visitation and overnight'
stays, showed an eight per cent
increase during 1961 when 455,090
visitor units were recorded
through the month of September.
This latter figure, reported Mr.
Yeager, does not include the total
number of concessioner accommo
dations from Crater lake lodge.
Although camping and conces
sioner accommodation figures
were up from 1960, they did not
show a substantial increase over
total visitor day use. iTbese daily
figures are apparently keeping!
stride with the overall Increase
in use noted in Oregon's only na-.
tional park.
- OFFICERS GRADUATED
PANAMA (AP)-The first Latin
American officers to attend anti
guerrilla courses at the U.S.
Army School at Fort Gulick in
file Canal Zone were graduated
Friday. MaJ. Gen. Theodore F.
Bogart, commander of U.S. Army
forces in the Caribbean, presented
diplomas to 62 officers from' 15
countries.
It's Buick...
of course!
'62 Buick Styling Cited
By Interior Designers
DETROIT. The American In-
tit ule of Interior Denlgneri hai
f resented its award for aulomo
Iva atyllrtf for 192 to Buick.
the award waa prevented at at
Detroit luncheon by Milton
Glaer, AID pre&ident, and (V
cepted on behalf of Buick by
Roland S. Wither, general Mlea
inanecer.
Until I art year, the AID hail
liveer presented an award In -the
auto induatry and has mad
no automotive styling award ex
cept to Buick. said Glaser. The
award was made In recognition
of the advancements in design
and the use of interior decorator
techniques and new fabrics and
colors In the entire Buick line
for 1063. he added.
In the eltaUon the AID said
the "1063 special award for au
tomotive styling presented to
Buick for distinctive and taste
ful motor oar design and Inter
ior decor ....'
front "Automotive Nsws"
See the Beautiful '62
. Bulckt NOW - at
JIMWINDE
BUICK CO.
1330 Main
Ph. 4-3141
FACTORY SALE!
MOHAWK
100o Wool
AW
Including Foam Rubber Pad
And Expert Tackiest Installation
' Compare
at 14.50 Yd.
MONTHS
lo
o)n ncerui
FURNITURE CO.
"Where Quality It
2)1 Wain
HERALD AND
ALY WASSIL
Knife, Fork
Slates Aly
Members of the Klamath Knife
and Fork Club will hear Aly Was
sil Oct. 10i 6:30 p.m. at the Wi
nema Hotel.
Wassil who has studied in both
schools of the Far East and the
West said, "the traditions, cul
ture, religions and philosophies of
the East and the practical civiliza
tion of the West are reconcilable."
"The time will come," Wassil
said, "when these two great
peoples will have mutual under
standing."
Wassil has attended Nizam Col
lege, Muslin University, Osmania
University In India, Harvard,
Massachusetts Institute of Tech.
nology and the University of Cal
ifornia at Los Angeles.
He will be introduced to the
Knife and Fork dinner meeting by
Chairman Buz Larkin. Presiding
will be club president, John
Moehl. Invocation will be given
by Rev. Robert Groves of the
First Presbyterian Church.
Caged Lions
Maul Trainer
N0RRIST0WN. Pa. (AP) - A
Hon trainer feeding meat to two
circus lions was mauled Friday
when one of the beasts reached
through his cage and grabbed the
trainer's arm.
Walter Hayes, 34, the trainer,
was admitted to Montgomery Hos
pital for treatment of gashes and
abrasions of the hand.
Hayes, of Delaware, Ohio, told
police the lion that grabbed him
was a male named Caesar. He
said the other Hon, a female
named. Sheba, remained quiet)
Haves said Caesar did not hold
him, so he was able to walk away
unaided.
Three Bandits
Get $21,000
PRETORIA, South Africa (AP)
Three white bandits Friday
robbed three bank employes in
central Pretoria of funds estimat
ed at $231,000. Police called it the
biggesta rmcd robbery in South
Africa s history.
Offlcors said the robbers had
halted a van in which employes
of the Volkskas People's Bank
were transporting money from a
post office to the bank's head of
fice. The bandits, armed with pis
tols, tied up the employes and
drove off in the van..
Yard
Installed
TO PAY!!
Net Expensive"
Next to Willard Hotel
ET
(5)98
NTWg.aimth Falls. Orego
Vet .
Aiff ttzicr?
United Fund
Editor's Note: This is another
of a Herald and News series of
reports on Klamath County Unit-;
ed Fund agencies. As many of the
27 agencies will be covered in
subsequent stories as time and
space permit.
BOYS AND GIRLS AID SOCIETY
Adoptive placements by the
Boys and Girls Aid Society of
Oregon have been increasing stea
dily during the past six years
according to a statement released
today by the Klamath County
United Fund.
The serious problems faced by
adoption agencies in the place
ment of children is illustrated in
the report by the case of Coralee,
a 3-year-old, whose mother had
deserted the family and whose fa
ther was so confused he could
not care for the child. Coralee'i
vision was seriously impaired and
she had, therefore, to wear very
thick-lensed glasses, a very diffi
cult task for a 3-year-old.
The search for an adoptive home
was a very long. one, because of
her physical frailty and impaired
vision. During the search for an
adoptive home, Coralee was cared
for in a certified foster home and
the board and room was paid by
Boys and Girls Aid Society, a
member agency of our Klamath
County United Fund.
Her foster parents helped her
learn to use her glasses and, in
other ways, helped her to learn
to live in a normal family situ-
ation. During this period a trained
social worker from Boys and Girls
Aid Society worked with Coralee
and the foster parents, helping
the child to be less afraid and
to understand what had happened
to her.
After about a year Coralee was
placed in an adoptive home where
she is getting along splendidly.
Now she has permanent adoptive
parents who love her and will be
with her always, The adoptive par
ents are making use of the skilled
services of the Boys and Girls
Aid Society until they more fully
understand Coralee and no long
er need this help. A total of 1,130
different children were helped by
the Boys and Girls Aid Society of
Oregon during I960, 24 of these
were from Klamath County.
Divorce, remarriage, and un
wanted children cause most of
the problems faced by the Boys
and Girls Aid Society of Oregon
according to a statement issued
!o Klamath County United Fund
by Stuart R. Stimmcll, executive
director of the society, this week
Citing the case of Carla, aged 7
years, Stimmell related the story
of divorce by Carta's parents, re
marriage by both parties, and a
stepfather who hated her. Her
mother arranged to send Carla to
her own father, who had also re
married. His new wife could not
handle Carla, and the father ap
pealed to the court in his area to
Syria Awaits Nasser's
PARIS (UPD The Syrian re-l
volt dealt a severe blow to the
prestige of UAR President Gamal
Abel Nasser, but the new Syrian
regime is not yet out of the woods
and Nasser p r o b a b 1 y has not
made his last move. ,
American correspondents per
mitted for the first time into Da
mascus after the Sept. 29 over
throw of the Nasser regime in
Syria reported an apparent broad
base of support for the new gov
ernment of Premier Mamoun Al-
Kuzbari.
The questions now are the steps
to be taken toward recognition of
the new regime by the Western
powers and the Soviet Union,
Nasser's next move and the suc
cess of efforts by the Kuzbari
government to solidify its support
among the working people, peas
ants and students.
Nasser's next step especially
must be awaited because the
Egyptian leader has been on the
ropes before, notably during the
Anglo-French invasion of Suez,
but has emerged successfully and
still in control.
UPI correspondents in Syria's
next door neighbor Lebanon re
port that a further necessity for
the success of the new govern
ment will be quirk massive doses
of foreign aid to finance the larce
scale construction and develop
ment projects started under Nasser.'
DENTAL PLATES
A NEW DENTAL PLATE
MAN FROM YOUR OLD, FOR
AS LITTLE AS $55.00 EACH
REPAIRS and RELINES
WHILE YOU WAIT
NO APPOINTMCNT NEEDED
PERSONAL DENTURE
SERVICE
Open 9 a.m. to S
1033 Main St.
Sunday, October I, 161
receives
Support
help. Efforts to preserve either
the mother's or the father's home
for Carla ended, with the result
that Carla was permanently com
mitted to the Boys and Girls Aid
Society for adoptive planning.
Carla had been physically pun
ished to the point of abuse by her
stepmother and was hurt, afraid,
and confused. She was placed by
Boys and Girls Aid in a tempor
ary foster home where one o! the
society's trained clinicians worked
closely with her, helping her to
understand what was happening
to her and getting to know her
better so that a proper adoptive
home could be found for her. Dur
ing this period she had frequent
stomach upsets, minor illnesses
and nightmares.
Planning for adoption has moved
along well and soon Carla will
be meeting her new adoptive par
ents who have already been chos
en for her. Cartas nightmares
and stomach upsets, have almost
totally disappeared, but this has
taken a year of care and treat
ment. The society has also now
accepted the care for Carta's 5-
year-old sister, Patty, and plans
to place the girls together in the
same adoptive home. The work of
the Boys and Girls Aid Society is
financed in part by the local
Klamath County United Fund.
Counterfeit
Move Asked
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - U.S
Commissioner Donald Constine
Friday recommended that federal
court order the removal of two
Northern Californians to Spokane,
Wash., to face charges of partici
pating in a counterfeit money or
der ring.
They are Melvin Thomas Han
sen, 35, editor of the San Mateo
County Coastside News at Pacifi
es, Calif., and Jerry Weston Tray
er, 40, San Francisco bartender.
The men and two other persons
are accused in a Spokane federal
complaint with conspiring to pass
counterfeit money orders in Wash-
incton. Oregon, California, Idaho
and Montana.
Birk Assigned
FIRST CALVARY, Korea-ifCapt.
Elmer L. Birk, U.S. Army.S'bose
wife. Margarita, lives at 6407,
Harlan Drive, Klamath Falls, has
been recently assigned to Army
intelligence here. He entered the
Army in 1950 and is a 1945 grad
uate of Henley High School. He
is a 1950 graduate of the military
academy at West Point. His par
ents, Mr. and Mrs; Lawrence
Birk, live on Route 2, Klamath
Falls.
The first jarring effects ot Syri
an revolt on the Middle East as
a whole aonear to have been
largely absorbed.
Israel, bordering Syria and a
favorite target of Nasser propa
ganda attacks, n a t u r a 1 1 y was
pleased.
Jordan's young King Hussein,
also from time to time a Nasser
tar cel. also was pleased and,
oromptlv recognized the new re
gime, as did Turkey which also
borders Syria.
But it was nolable that beyond
Nasser's brief and abortive para-
troop attack on the Syrian rob-
els, Mideast boundaries remained
quiet and nowhere did troops go'
lunging toward a Dorncr.
Threat Is Past
French Foreign Office observ
ers who traditionally keep a close
eye on Mideast events, now be
lieve any threat of military action
largely has disappeared.
Such action, they ociieve, wouia
have to have taken place within
the first few days.
If the new regime is successful
and if there is no outside inter
ference, such as from the Com
munists, it Is possible a new Mid
east alignment will develop.
But these are "its" dependent
upon a slill unsettled situation.
If the coup proved anything, it
proved that there still is no such
thing as Arab unity and that
events in the Mideast revolve
p.m.
6 Days
TU 4-3214
Boy WJan is Iteftp
But MaiiroQbJdfette
By ANN LANDERS
Dear Ann Landers: I'm a nor
mal boy of 17 who would like to
take out a girl. I'm not sweet on
I any special chick
L .
Oil
several elite ones
school I'd like
ask for
dale. The prob
lem is my moth-
She says a boy
17 (I'll be 18 in December) should
not be thinking about girls, and
if she catches me talking to a
girl on the phone or sitting in a
uirl's house after school, she'll
knock my block off.
Mom checks on me whenever
I say I'm going over to a guy's
house. She calls up there to ask
me some dumb question. When
I tell her I'm going to the li
brary after school I find her sit
ting there "accidentally." The
guys all know about this and the
ribbing is murder.
Can you give me some help
with my problem? TAILED
Dear Tailed: It's your mother
who has the real problem. A boy
almost 18 who wants to date
should be allowed to do so. Moth
ers who are too possessive some
times need professional help. Show
her this column and if she has
anv Questions she'd like to ask
Timber Crop
Grows Well
SPOKANE (API Forest growth
in the United States is outpacing
consumption, a Washington State
University official said Friday.
John A. Guthrie, director of the
economic and business bureau at
WSU, told the third annual Indus
trial and Economic Development
Conference he did not believe pre
dictions of a "timber famine.
Guthrie said ptilpwood 'output
must be doubled by 1975 to insure
growth of the timber industry in
the Pacific Northwest. ;
"Paper is cheaper than cloth
and will soon be a widely used
substitute," he said, forecasting a
bright future for pulp and paper
production.
India Monsoon
Kills Thousand
CALCUTTA, India (AP) More
than 100 persons were feared
killed by a monsoon that turned
1.500 square miles of India's Bi
har State into a vast lake, accord
ing to police reports reacning
here today.
Swollen rivers reportedly wiped
out 31 villages, and panic-stricken
villagers fled when a crocodile
infested lake burst its banks.
Many of the victims were killed
by crocodiles, police said.-
Next Move
around a few outstanding individ
uals and ancient hatreds.
Iraq Quiet
'Iraq has remained silent but
Premier Gen. Abdul Kasscm un
doubtedly would be willing to
strengthen his hand in the strug
gle for Arab leadership against
Nasser.
Saudi Arabia has mended .its
fences in its frequently strained
relations with Nasser but there is
no love lost between the Egyptian
ruler and the ruling family com
posed of the sons of old lbn Saud
Turkey, a non-Arab country,
also has had frequent troubles
with Nasser under the former
UAR, but in the present circum
stances 'has worries of its own.
The single unifying factor in
the Mideast has been the Arab
hatred of Israel.
Within a few hours of the out
set of any military action. Israel,
could muster 200.000 well-trained
and equipped men in the field
and remains the strongest mili
tary power able to hold its own
against any proven Arab combi
nation.
As the situation now stands.
Nasser has lost much of the force
with which he appered as an
Arab spokesman before the un
aligned nations at Belgrade in
September or as he appeared be
lore me United Nations a year
ago.
Klamath Falts. Oregon
I Serving Southern Oregon
nd Northern California
Puellihwj dally (txcepf Sat.) -end Sundae
i Klamath Publishing Company
Mam at Esplanade
Phone TUxeoo 4-1111
I W. l. SWEETlANO, Pub i ia re
entered at lecood ciau matter et the
pot office at Ktamath Pain. Oreaon.
on August 70. IKi under, ct of Con
oreu. March X tl?t. Scondlau pott
7e pe.d at Klamath Fall. Oregon
and at aMianel mailing office. ,
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Carrier
1 Month i n
Month tlO
Year ttl.M
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1 Month t.tj
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' Veer tUM
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weekday & Sunday, copy ttte :
UNiliD PRESS INTERNATIONAL
ASSOCIATED PRESS
AUDIT EUREAU OP CIRCULATION
Subscriber l net receiving delivery t
their Herald and New, 'pleat ehen
Gene Carpenter, Circulation Manege
TUeao e-liu before f p.m.
me I'd bejiappy to oblige.
Dear Ann Landers: Why would
a man profess his undying devo
tion to a woman, promise her
marriage "when he is financially
able and at the same time buy
ner lerrciy expensive gilts, see
her only on Mondays, Wednes
days and Fridays, never intro
duce her to his business associ
ates or friends, and ask her not to
phone him at home because his
mother is very nervous and the
telephone bothers her.
I worship this man and because
of him I have cut myself off
from all other male contacts for
the last three years. These ques
tions plague me. Can you provide
answers? BLIND LOVE
Dear Blind: I can't provide an
swers, but I can Hazard a guess
or two.
This man is very much married
and his "mother" who can't stand
to hear the telephone ring Is real
ly Ills wife. Or he Is a mama's
boy and Is actually afraid to let
his mother know he's Interested in
a woman.
In either case, the relationship
doesn't stanA the chance of a
snowflake in New Orleans, Knock
it off.
Dear Ann Landers: I run a
high-class rooming house for work
ing girls. I don't rent to just any
body. A certain young woman who is
24 moved in about six months
ago. She came from a small
town and looked like Elsie Dins-
more no make-up, hair the color
God gave her and she carried her
belongings in a suitcase with leath
er straps around it.
She got herself an office job
the second day in town and two
months later she went blonde,
learned to paint up and took on
a second job modeling. I see her
leave with a hatbox around din
ner time and often she doesn't
come home until it's light out
side.
It's unhealthy for a young girl
to work so many hours. I think
she should give up one job or the
other. Should I write to her moth
er and tell her what kind of
hours her daughter is keeping?
I alwavs take the mothers' ad
dresses in case of'emergency.
MOTHER MOLLY
Dear Molly: This Is no emer
gency. A girl 24 knows how many
hours she wants to work. If you
feel she's getting Into deep wa
ter, talk to her.
Confidential to Wanting To Do
Right: It's lovely of you to want
to give this girl the shirt off your
back, but why leave your diamond
cufflinks in it? See a lawyer be
fore you make a move.
Confidential to Prisoner of De
cency: Sorry, you'll have to write
your own letter of farewell. This
is out of my line.
To learn the bobby-traps of teen
age drinking, write for Ann Lan
ders' booklet, "Teenage Drink
ing," enclosing with your request
20 cents in coin and a long, self
addressed, stamped envelope.
Ann Landers will be glad to
help you with your problems.
Send them to her in care of this
newspaper enclosing a stamped.
self-addressed envelope.
I nib'
METRO-GOLDWYN-MAYER'pnmtt
Richard BOONE George HAMILTON
A ROBERT J. ENDERS
PRODUCTION
RICHARD
CHARLES BRONSON
Tifacr Has
m A-Okay
Test Trip
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP)
The Air Force sent its Titan in
tercontinental range missile wing
ing to its eighth straight success
on a 5,000-file test flight down the
Atlantic range Friday night.
The flight further confirmed re
liability of the Titan and edged it
nearer combat readiness. The
first nine-missile squadron is
slated for deployment at Lowry
Air force Base, Colo., late this
year.
The success was the third this
week for a long-range U.S.
missile. Earlier, two Atlases hit
target 5,000 and 9.000 miles
away.
The Titan was steered by a self-
contained mertial guidance sys
tem designed for use in later,
more powerful Titan I missiles.
The Titan I missile Friday night
was modilied slightly to accom
modate the guidarice. Titan 1
rockets normally employ a radio
command guidance system which
sends direction signals to the
weapon after it is airborne.
The Air Force and Martin Co.
which makes the missile, plan six
squadrons each of Titan I and If.
Each will have nine missiles
equipped with nuclear warheads.
Both series will be protected in
concrete underground silos.
Four Firms
File Suits
CHICAGO (AP) Four electric
power companies filed antitrust
damage suit against 19 electrical
equipment manufacturers Friday
in u.a. District Court.
The plaintiffs are the Central
Illinois Light Co., Iowa Electric
Light and Power Co., Iowa-Il
linois ;as and Electric Co., and
Iowa Power and Light Co.
In nine separate suit the four
firms alleged the manufacturers
conspired in "unreasonable re
straint of interstate sale of equip
ment. The plaintiffs sought triple dam
agesthree times the difference
between what they claim thev
paid for the equipment and what
they alleged would have been paid
if the defendants had not "fixed
and maintained artificial prices."
No specific cash Hgure was
named in the suits.
Manufacturers named in the
suits include: Schwager-W o o d
Corp., Portland, Ore.;
Keely Better
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) - Singer
Keely Smith, divorced Tuesday
from bandleader Louis Prima,
was doing well today in Cedars
of Lebanon Hospital where she
underwent surgery for an internal
disorder.
Miss Smith, 29, was operated
on Friday after her return Thurs
day from Las Vegas, Nev., where
she divorced Prima. A friend said
she intended to postpone the sur
gery until after a European va
cation, but decided to be operated
on instead.
Continuous Shows.
Today from
ill
a
CHAMBERLAIN JAMES WARNER
SUNDAY .
SMORGASBORD DINNER, 2 to
7 p.m., Chiloquin Masonic Hall.
Sponsored by Cascade Crest So
cial Club. Hunters welcome.
MONDAY
CHILOQUIN PTA. 2:30
p rn
Anniversary
Celebrated
By Germans
BERLIN (UPD-East Germans
celebrated their 12th ' anniversary
as a Soviet satellite Saturday, for
tified by high-level Russian pledg
es of moral and military support
for a separate peace treaty and
settlement of the Berlin crisis.
Premier Nikita Khrushchev said
in a cable to Communist boss
Walter Ulbricht' that what he
called the danger of war in Eu
rope made the signing of an East
German treaty "urgently neces
sary. He said it, will be signed
"in the very near future."
Marshal Ivan Koniev, the Soviet
army commander in Germany
and a World War II war hero.
pledged Friday night that Russian
troops would fight if the West at
tacks East Germany.
"If the American imperialists
and the West Germans dare to
attack the first workers' state in
German history, the Soviet sol
diers will defend the (Red) Ger
man democratic republic as their
own land, he said in a message
to UlbrichU
First Deputy Premier Anastas
Mikoyan, communism's traveling
salesman, arrived in Berlin Fri
day. He said Russia will support
fcast uermany come what may.
Mikoyan was the major guest
at a mass meeting in East Ber
lin's Marx-Engels Square this
morning.
Strike Settled
SPOKANE (AP) A six day
Sunshine Mining Co. strike, which
idled about 450 employes in the
Coeur d'Alene mining district of
North Idaho, was settled Friday
night.
Louis Ziman, federal mediator,
said negotiators agreed on a six
cent wage increase across the
board.
John Edgar, Spokane, vice pres
ident of the company, said all
employes will report for work on
the first shift Moriday.
Sunshine is one of the nation's
largest silver producers.
Now! Open 6:45
Shew Starts
7:00 P.M.
"RoDan"
and
"Go Johnny
Go"
12:45
THiS
VMSTllE
NAKED
FROHriFR
a world of
men without
women...
and then
she came
flaunting
herself,
until
the blood
pounded
In their
hearts
like a
i nullum . j t
of VrumsA
.VjPSlf:'
ft
Luana PATTEN Arthur O'CONNELL
ttei e
BELLAH JOSEPH flEWMAN
, w
Chiloquin Elementary School. Em
mett Gulley, speaker,
JUNIPER GARDEN CLL, ex
ecutive board, 1 p.m., Mrs. Scott
MtKendree, 1893 Del Moro.
AAUW GREAT BOOKS, 7:30
p.m. City Library. Dennis Gary
leading discussion on Sophocles.
KLAMATH FALLS LIONS AUX
ILIARY, 7:45 p.m.. home of Mrs.
Ed Robinson, 2030 Van Ness Ave
nue. EWAUNA TOASTMISTRESS
CLUB, 7:30 p.m., Willard Hotel.
Guest welcome.
CATHOLIC DAUGHTERS,) S
p.m. regular meeting, Sacred
Heart Parish Hall. ,
TUESDAY
FAIRHAVEN PARENTS AND
PATRONS, 7:30 p.m., Fairhaven
Gym.
WEDNESDAY
LINDLEY HEIGHT'S EXTEN
SION, 10 a.m., Joan's Kitchen.
Tolerance Hit
By Attorney
PORTLAND (AP) - All levels
of American society show too
much tolerance for law violation,
Atty. Gen. Robert Kennedy told
the Portland City Club Friday. .
As a result, he said, there is
"cynicism and the cheap, false
philosophy that everything is a
racket." '
Crime is increasing four times
faster than population growth
would warrant, Kennedy said.
Basic attitudes of the people
must change, he said, or racket
will prosper.
CONTINUOUS FROM 12:45 P
Rock
Hudson
lnllnhrinid
Sandra Dee
Bobby Darin
Walter Slezak
pi.
8
TOPAY
in ir iiMinTewiLiTiTaa
DUANE EDDY Top Rtcontmg 6tr