Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, January 07, 1963, Page 5, Image 5

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MAR 2
54-57-8-9aTl
Bcrffe Over Skybolt
Smoulders In Congress
WASHINGTON UPI HouseSenate commitlce as early as Jan
and Senate Armed Services com- "aT '8. His testimony would
mittees Saturday were1 preparing
hearings, early in the new con
erossional session, which will
heap new fuel On the Skybolt mis
sile controversy.
Defense Secretary Robert S
McNamara has been alerted for a
possible appearance before the
There's Still Time
To Make Your Own
STORM WINDOWS
cover the nation's overall defense
status including the decision to
cancel the Skybolt program.
If the expected Senate dispute
over the anti-filibuster rule de
lays proceedings in the Senate.
McNamara may make his first
congressional defense of the Sky
bolt decision before the House
committee. Chairman Carl Vin
son, D-Ga., has planned a similar
set ol hearings.
Both Vinson and Chairman
Richard B. Russell, D-Ga., of the
Senate committee, plan to treat
the annual hearings as the open-l
mg evaluation of .the customary
authorization bill for purchase of
planes, ships and missiles by the
armed services. Thus Pentagon
proponents of the Skybolt will
have a chance to state their case.
Some committee members in
cluding a former Air Force secre
tary. Sen. Stuart Symington, D-
Mo., have made it clear that they
will be ready with inquiries de
signed lo challenge the Defense
Department's decision to abandon
development of the super-sonic.
oir-tosurface Skybolt.
WE HAVEyfe
-
STORM WINDOW KIT
77 i 36 Sheet Ctor rHeitfc, No w4
Molding r yth.f yee need ateke
' ttorm in i nmvtet
AT YOUR LOCAL DEALER
CRYSTAL CllA
CUT, TACK, SEW or SEAL
HUNDREDS OF USES
INDOORS OUTDOORS
fTWN WAtl 10'KTDIt
1
J. W. KERNS
734 So. 6th TU 4-417
Religious Cult Defies
Raid By U.S. Marshals
WASHINGTON iL'PD A re
ligious cult which claims a ma
chine that registers spiritual im
pulses Saturday night accused the;
U. S. government of burning
books of philosophy" In an ac
tion "worthy of Khrushchev."
L. Ron Hubbard, U. S.-born
president and pastor of the found
ing Church of Scientology, said in
a cable sent here from his British
home that U. S. government al
legations against the organization
are "completely false."
Oscar Brinkman, Washington
attorney for the church, de
scribed Fridays raid of the
church premises here and the
seizure of polygraphs and tracts
used in the cult's teaching as
"worthy of Khrushchev in Rus
sia."
The raid'was carried out by
14 federal marshals armed with
court order granted at the re
quest of the Food and Drug Ad
ministration.
FDA said the Scientologists
claim the polygraphs they use are
"adequate and effective for diag
nosis, prevention, treatment, de
tection and elimination of' the
causes of all mental and nervous
disorders and illnesses..."
These claims, FDA told a dis
trict court, are "false and mis
leading."
But Dr. John Fudge, a British
subject who described himself as
assistant pastor of the Washing
ton church, said the polygraphs
which he identified as electro
meters" neither heal nor diag
nose.
The meter," he said, "meas
ures actual mental energy. It
measures tiny impulses coming
from the mind or from the spirit
itself. It measures spiritual impulses."
A trained "auditor" of the
Scientologists, Fudge added, can
employ the information provided
by the electrometer to help a
subject who is being processed."
He said, in reply to questions,
that Scientologists are able to
improve both the intelligence quo
tient and the physical ability of
individuals by saving the spirit
which alone can heal the body.
Brinkman said he handled the
incorporation of the founding
Church of Scientology here about
10 years ago. The Academy of
Scientology, where Friday's raid
was carried out, is the teaching
branch of the church, he said.
Brinkman said he witnessed
the raid. He said the marshals
"went through even all the clos
ets" and seized not only "electro
meters" belonging to the acade
my but some owned privately by
persons being trained there.
The Church of Scientology,
Brinkman asserted, will vigor
ously contest the seizure, which
it regards as unconstitutional and
in violation of the guarantee of
Ireedom of religion and of the
right to print."
The latter reference was to
seizure of several boxes of pam
phlets describing the Scientolog
ists' claims for their "electro
meters."
Port Strike
Alarms JFK
MacLaren Boy
Attacks Man
SALEM (UPD - A 17-ycar-old
Coos County youth attacked a su
pervisor at Chadwick Cottage at
MacLaren School for Boys early
today. Board of Control Secretary
Nick Pcct said.
Miguel Yovona had gone to the
bathroom and asked permission
to get a drink at a fountain out
side in the hall, Peet said.
Yovona, described as husky.
pulled a knife and grabbed super
visor Charles Warren and threat
ened him,
Warren flipped Yovona to the
floor and two other boys helped
disarm him.
Ml ilw
;-ttr
x :
56
ft -" A
i-pnui'i
463,236
paid to savers on
December 31st.
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for Maximum
Earnings in '63
$912,448.37 In Earnings Paid In '62
Wise money managers know the sure way
to make money produce happiness and se
curity. They invest where it is fluctuation
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vantages. January 1st to 10th is an ideal time for
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ing here. Convert non-earning, low return
and speculative dollars into a safe, full
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Funds invested by January 10th earn
rom January 1st.
4
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BE THE PROUD OWNER OF SAVINGS SECURITY
NEY YORK (UPD - Sources
close to the administration said
Saturday President Kennedy is
becoming increasingly alarmed
and may seek anti-strike legisla
tion to end the M-day-old long
shoremen's strike.
Labor Secretary W. Willard
Wirtz continued his separate
meetings with officials of the
International Longshoremen's As
sociation (1LA) and New York
Shipping Association (NYSA.
The ILA and NYSA were re
ported only 4 cents apart on the
subject of wages, but neither side
appeared ready to budge from
current offers.
Reports from Washington that
Kennedy might seek legislation to
end the dispute brought criticism
from ILA officials.
On another front, the ILA was
under a court order in Galves
ton, Tex., to unload bananas
from two ships docking last week.
The ILA s Gull District repre
sentatives may present shippers
in Miami, Galveston, Mobile,
Ala., and New Orleans with new
proposals Monday.
Businessmen in Boston ap
pealed lo U. S. Sen. Edward M.
i Ted) Kennedy, brother of the
President, to help end an alleged
secondary boycott connected with
I he strike. The businessmen said
they were unable to move goods
from Boston docks to store and
that construction on the piers has
been halted.
Tenderfoot
Robs Store
HURON, S.D. IUPH A Cali
fornia youth who "went western"
proved himself to be only a tenderfoot.
Jn the traditons of the Old West,
the 17-year-old lad robbed a west
ern clothing store here, but a dude
look gave him away.
Police picked up the youth when
it was reported a lad "garbed
like a cowboy" was in downtown
Huron on New Year's Day.
The boy broke into the store
about 4 a.m. Jan. 1, police said,
and stocked up on 7 cowboy
shirts. 5 pairs of slacks, 1 billfold,
western ties. 4 pairs of socks.
3 cowboy hats. 2 belts complete
with spare buckles, 2 cigarette
lighters and a whip.
I SZZP I
La
Bv W.
THE DOCTOR'S MAILBAQ
Ulcers Classified
In Two Main Types
HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls, Oregon
Monday, January 7, 1963
PAGE-S
G. BKAN'DSTADT. M.O.
Written for
Newspaper Enterprise Assn.
A very rich but high-strung
man was once heard to say: "Up
to now I've boon working on my
first million, now I'm working
on my tirst ulcer. Let's hope
that he took stock of himself and
prevented his first ulcer by learn
ing to relax and to handle his
emotional problems with equanimity.
Peptic ulcer is really two sep
arate diseases: gastric (stomach)
ulcer and duodenal ulcer which
occurs just beyond the outlet of
the stomach. Most persons with
duodenal ulcer are men, but both
men and women get gastric ul
cers in about the same propor
tion. The nervous tensions that
are now known to play a large
part in causing duodenal ulcers
have not been associated with gas
tric ulcers.
Duodenal ulcers rarely become
cancerous but gastric ulcers often
do. This has led some surgeons
to recommend removing that part
of the stomach that harbors an
ulcer in every person w ho has this
condition. But there is a growing
belief that this operation should
not be performed unless there is
definite proof of the presence of
cancer.
The pain of both tvpes of ulcer
is the same. It has been called a
chemical pain because It is ag
gravated by contact of the normal
stomach acids on the raw ulcer
surface and is relieved by either
neutralizing the acid or stopping
the secretion of acid.
The pain characteristically can
be localized with the tip of one
finger near the midline of the
body and above the navel. It Is
not present when 'the stomach is
full of food but comes on about
two hours after eating and per
sists until either more food or
an antacid is taken.
This pain is usually aggravat
ed by eating such coarse foods as
corn, peas, beans, apple 6kins
and bran because of the hard fi
brous coatings. It is also aggravat
ed by citrous juices or anything
that contains vinegar and by
smoking.
Because of the element of ner
vous tension in persons with duo
denal ulcers it is a common ob
scrvation that when on a vaca
tion there would be no pain. Some
persons even lound that they had
no pain on Sundays and holidays.
This would suggest severe ten
sions associated with the v i c-
tim's work. If (he pains wcro
worse on Sundays and holidays the
injurious tensions usually cen
tered around an unwholesome
home situation. '
Ideas about the treatment of
peptic ulcers have changed rn
recent years with advances in
knowledge. Reliance used to be
placed almost entirely on frequent
feedings of milk and the taking
of antacids between feedings.
Many doctors have now replaced
milk with gelatin. In addition to
the use of antacids they have
turned to aluminum hydroxide
preparations which form a gel
in the stomach that coats over
the ulcer and protects it from
acids.
Beside these measures two ways
have been discovered to cut down
on the production of acid by the
stomach.
One is the use of drugs that
block the nervous stimuli to the
acid-producing glands In the lin
ing of the stomach and the other
is the application of quick freezing
to the stomach lining. This latter
method Is still considered experi
Blight Of Mew York Hews Strike
Casts Shadow On Entire Industry
BASIN BRIEFS
MERRILL
MR. AND MRS. FRANK HOW
ARD of Merrill have returned
from a trip to South America
where they visited Buenos Aires
and Rio de Janeiro. They were
gone three months and toured
southern parts of the U.S. on their
way home.
MR. AND MRS. LOU HILL had
20 dinner guests on Christmas
Day. Those present from distant
places were trir daughter and
family, Mr. and Mrs. Mike Brant
and sons of Beaverton; Mike's
parents. Mr. and Mrs. Walter
Pomranig of Portland, and Mr.
and Mrs. Ralph Johnston of Keno.
WILLLAM JENNETTE. who has
recently been In the hospital, is
improving at his home and is well
on his way to recovery.
CLEVE OCIIS flew his mother.
Mrs. Warren Ochs, to Eugene last
week where they spent three days
visiting Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Hunnicutt who live at Veneta.
MR. AND MRS. FRANCIS LA
NE Y had their daughter. Tom
mys, who is attending Linfield
College at MrMinnville, and son
Perry, who is serving with the
Army at Fort Knox. Ky.. home
for the Christmas holidays.
MR. AND MRS. ROGER TROT
MAN of Portland spent the Christ
mas holiday with her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Hugh Braniff, Klamath
Falls, and Trolman's brother and
family, Mr. and Mrs. Bob Trot
man of Merrill.
NEW YORK (UPD -The rec
ord strike that has deprived New
York of the 5.7 million dailv
copies of its major newspapers
could affect the entire U. S. news
paper industry and the vast com
mercial printing field as well.
It has silenced presses and
blacked out huge areas of infor
mation here for more than a
month. The public has suffered in
many w ays. The results are being
watched across the country.
Intensity of feeling. Union rival
ry, prestige ot age and skill, and
the long, creeping shadow of au
tomation are involved in the fight.
'Facing one of the most cru
cial tests in its 112-year history,
our local is now engaged In a
life-and-dealh battle with the Pub
lishers Association of New Y'ork
City. . ." thus begins the current
official bulletin of Local No. 6 of
the International Typographical
Union.
Hoffa Union
Loses Ballot
NEW YORK (UPD The Com
munication Workers of America
scored a decisive victory in its i
struggle with James R. Hoffa s
Teamsters Union (or the right to
represent 17,200 Western Electric
Co. Installers.
The National Labor Relations
Board said a mail ballot vote
tabulated here Friday showed 11,-
388 votes for the CWA and 4.000
for the teamsters with t9 work
ers votinfi for neither union.
Joseph A. Beirne, president of
the CWA, said Western Electric
employes have "clearly repu
diated the raiding effort of the
Teamsters Union under the du
bious leadership of James R.
Hoffa."
The election climaxed a heated
campaign by both unions for the
right to represent the installers
The teamsters claimed thai the
CW A had not obtained wages for
the skilled installers comparable
lo those currently received by
telephone company employes do
ing similar work.
The publishers say, in an adver
tisement: "The newspapers of
New York City are faced with a
question of survival. A settlement
of the strike now going on must
be one that permits them to stay
in business. . . to meet their re
sponsibilities to the community
and to preserve the Jobs of ail
their 20.000 employes.
Behind Editorial Workers
There matters stand. The union
of printers, once the Industry's
aristocrat, seems bitterly detor-i
mined to regain Jts place in the
sun. In recent years a union of
editorial workers has forged ahead
of it in wages, hours, pension and
vacations.
The publishers have said that
going beyond the area of their
final offer "would surely put
some papers out of business."
They offered a S9.20 weekly pack
age increase over two years which
if applied to all craft unions in
volved, would cost $9 million in
its second year. They said the
package the printers proposed 15
minutes before tho strike amount
ed to $38 weekly per man and
when applied to all unions would
increase annual costs $40 million
on the nine -papers affected.
The strike was called at 2 a.m.
Dec. 8 by Local 6, and 17 days
later it set a strike-length record
for New York newspaper!. It is
the only strike called by the print
ers in the 65-year history of the
New York Publishers Association.
Founded by Greeley
Tho local was founded in 1850
'by Horace Greeley. The last
strike it had called here prior to
this one was 79 years ago.
It is the biggest local. b far.
of the ITU, which is the oldest
trade union In the United States
and the principal union In the
printing trades. The printers' big
gest jobs are setting type punch
ing the keys of a machine that
casts lines of type: and make-up
the job of putting the type into
lorms.
Local 6 has about 3.700 men in
dally newspapers and about 6,-
000 in the so-called "book and
job" shops which do ail other
types ot commercial printing
from magazines, business forms.
and financial prospectuses to la
bels telling you to shake-well-before-using,
and the Holy Bible.'
PROTECT
Your Estate
Throurb
EqulUMR' Living Inmrance
John H. Houston
s.rvlrft Sine IPM
MR. AND MRS. DICK REEVES
had his sister and family, Mr.
and Mrs. Tom Patton, Central
Point, as guests over the Christ
mas holiday, while nere tney
stayed w ith her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Verle Reeves, Klamath Falls.
MR. AND MRS. DWANE
RAINES and family, and Mrs.
Raines' mother, Mrs. Mary Glenn.
spent Christmas Day at Adel with
Mrs. Glenn's son and family, Mr.
and Mrs. Harold Gipson.
REV. AND MRS. LLOYD HEN
DERSON and Lincoln spent Christ
mas with Mrs. Henderson's cou
sin and family, Mr. and Mrs. Ig
natius Pazzintino. San Francisco.
Mrs. Henderson's brother and
family, Mr. and Mrs. Doug Land,
LaJolla, also came for the day.
BRING
THE
FAMILY
Broosted Chicken
Spaghetti
Pizza Pie
Try Our New
French Frfed Ravioli
Eat 'Em Here or
Orders To Go.
LUCCA CAFE
Ph. TU 4-3276
2354 S. 6th
GUARANTIED REPAIR
SERVICE AT WARDS
Hl-fl phono, radio. TV. ppllnrici
. . . Ward! technician li luit a
prion call a way I You'll Ilk fha
arvlct . . . rd tht prlcal Call
today!
MONTGOMERY WARD
SBRVICK OIPAMTMINT
TU 4-J1U fth A Pint
CM ITS FOH ALL
During Our 5th Anniversary
oij;x house:
I;rilnv. January 1 1
l Come ond Help Us Celebrate 5 Years of Progress
The HANK Of KLAMATH I ALLS
So. 6th and Klomoth
Member F.D.I.C.
.- f V ' RWHWJI I IH.iil.HWi IfllV'
v .JH. t - I II HIT -' ''li 4ll Rji III RIIWI
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Adjust Brakes and ;
CoQibination
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Front Wheels HI JJ j jjl
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Replacement1 part If nfdod
nd tortton bw ax)
mnt bo4 NMhtdaMl.
Ju3t Bay
"Charge it".
Take months
to pay...
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yjpy S MMi f T Coupon
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7& WINTER TREADS
. APPLIED ON ALL SOUND TtRC BOOItS OR OH YOUR TlftCS
'ANY SIZE
WHITE WALLS
mm mi
mmm
f .-v,..J.fSV '
arXV: 1
4 t'mA'
plui tax and 2 frad-ln1irss
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bff Adedailto and tkop mark, arc
t. Aces 4tWrj In workmatv
hip end nelene U during Uie
erf tread.
Attain normal road hesards
lexrept ifinbl pimrl ureal
enraioUreri la everyday pae
eenfer eer as for 12 month.
fUpUoemanta prorata, en tred
wee end baaed en liet pnres
eurreoi l lime 4 adjusboeni.
wtart four dollar buys MILES more
TiRE
and
BRAKE
SERVICE
Until
9:00 p.m.
FIRST FEDERAL
STORE
6th and Pine
Phone TU 4-8109
tfavtJryt and can .sJubeifdton
140 MAIN STRUT
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