COUP. . NttAER MCCTIOfl - many Contestants Vie lWu Loimwrd Puzzle Prize -See Page Mine Today Weatbr . Klamath Falls, Tidrliiiw a.-M Lakeview Variable elnadhv-s through Saturday, Gusty wtad .it times. Generally cooler tempi -4-tures. Lows tonight 8 ii Kiam;ith' Basin to 14 at Klamath Fails. High Saturday 35. Weekend fore cast Mostly fair with cold nights and cool days. Little if any precipitation Indicated. ! TIms- Weather Day's Slews High ytittrday Low last nigM High year ago Low year ago High pait 14 ytars Low patt U year Prtcip. pair 34 hours Sinca Jan. I $mt period last year Sunrikt Saturday Sun it i Saturday 41 (IfSt) -1 (MSI) 7:M J: 05 Price Ten Cents 14 Pages KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, FRIDAY, JANUARY 18, 1963 Telephone TU 4-SI1I No. 7041 Board Optimistic r , ir me. ' i. . A v, U.O? ORE.tlBRARt I By FRANK JENKINS President Kennedy sent to Con gress yesterday the biggest budg et in United States history a colossal 98 BILLION, 802 million dollar financial plan, which he said would permit the efficient and FRUGAL lyes, he used that word i conduct of the public busi ness. This proposed budget for next year is $499 million MORE than the previous record budget of $98,303,000,000 in WARTIME 1945. Which is to say: In this year of supposed peace, we propose to spend half a billion dollars more than we spent in the final year of the greatest war in our history which was also the greatest war in the his tory of the world. And - At the same time Our President proposes to CUT TAXES. In its net results, President Kennedy's budget for the fiscal year 1964 (meaning his estimate of what we will spend and what we will take in) will look like this: Income $86,900,000,000 Spending 98,802.000,000 DEFICIT 11,902,000,000 .' Chilling thought: In 1940, less than two and a half decades ago, the total expendi tures of the federal government of the United States were only $9,062,032,204. In the fiscal year 1964, expenditures will be $98, 802.000.000. The DEFICIT in fiscal 1964 will be $2.8 BILLION MORE than the ENTIRE OPERATING COST of the government of the United States only 24 years ago. ' Interesting question: WHITHER ARE WE BOUND? Another chilling thought: Back in 1940, only two and a half decades ago, the total ex penditures of the federal govern ment of the United btalcs were a trifle more than nine billion dol lars. At the end of fiscal year 1964. the national debt of the United States is expected to be $315 bil lion, 604 million. And, by that time, INTEREST on the national debt, it is anti cipated, will amount to more than the entire expenditures of the federal government back in 1940. In conclusion: It's quite a world we're living in. isn't it? One can't help wondering what Benjamin Franklin would have thought of it all if he could have foreseen the fiscal situation of the 1960s. UN Readies For Kolwezi ELISABETHVILLE, Katanga. :The Congo (UPD-U.N. forces prepared today to start moving into the Katangese stronghold of Kolwezi on the basis of an agree ment with provincial President Moise Tshombe. U.N. occupation of Kolwezi. a mining center and air base 150 miles northwest of here, was ex pected to make possible further talks on ending Katanga's seces sion and settling the 30-month Congo crisis. Indian Ghurka troops of the U.N. force were encamped at N'Gubu. 60 miles casi of KoUczi. An agreement between Tshom be and U.N. officials here Thurs day stipulated the U.N. take-over of Kolwezi would be completed peacefully by Monday. The agree ment followed Tshombe s an nouncement Tuesday of surrender in the face of U.N. military pres sure. An estimated 2.0O1 Katangese gendarmes and 300 white mercen aries were massed at Kolwezi, Tshombe's last bast'nn. but U.N. officials anticipated no trouble from them. Tombo agreed to order the gendarmes and (he pop ulation to cooperate in the U.N. occupation. Tshombe's agreement with U.N. officials George Sherry and Ma). Gen. Prem Chand of India still did not convince cenlral Premier Cyril le Adoula of the Katangese leader's sincerity to reunite his mineral-rich province with the rest of the Congo. Adoula said in Leopoldville that Tshombe several limes has "renounced his ambitions (or an independent Katanga" only to re nege. TV central premier said Tshom be would be given one more chance to reintegrate Katanga. f i V fit FANFANI DEPARTS Prior to his departure for Chicago after two days of meetings with President Kennedy, Italian Premier Amintore Fanfani greets Mrs. John Foster Dulles, widow of the late secretary of state, at a reception at the Italian Embassy in Washington. In the center is Italian Ambassador Serfio Fenoaltea. Kennedy is re ported to be planning an Italian visit this year. UPI Telephoto Klamath Legislators Ask Funds For Wildlife Study By W. B. SWEETLAND Action at the stale level on the current wildlife dispute will get underway early next week when Stale Senator Harry Boivin and Representatives George Flitcraft and Carrol Howe will introduce a joint resolution in the legisla ture calling or the creation of an interim committee to study the wildlife resources of the stale. Boivin will introduce the resolu tion in tlic Senate with the names of 10 other senators appended, and the House measure will be in troduced by Flitcraft and Howe Italy Visit Set By JFK WASHINGTON (UPI) Presi dent Kennedy will go to West Germany this year for an "in formal working visit" following a trip he and Mrs. Kennedy will make to Italy, the White House announced today. One well-informed source said Ihe trip probably would take place in the spring. It appeared largely connected to problems stemming from Britain's so far unsuccess ful attempts to enter the Euro pean Common Market. The While House said Kennedy was going to Bonn at the invita tion of West Germar Chancellor Konrad Adenauer. He previously had accepted an invitation to visit Italy which was extended by Ital ian Premier Amintore Fanfani during a visit here this week. Significantly, the official an nouncement said that "it is not contemplated that the President will make anv other stop in Eurojie during this trip." Churchill Claimed Pleased By Status As 'Honor' Citizen LONDON 'IPI - Friends of Sir Winston Churchill said today they are certain he would accept honorary citizenship in the United Stales if it is offered him. Sir Winston is proud of the American blood of his mother, the beautiful Jennie Jerome of New York He once laughingly describ ed him-el( as an "Anglo-American alliance." The 88-year-oM statesman read about tli resolution introduced in (oniress by Sen. Stephen Young. D-Ohio, in his Iindon home where he has been spending most of hi? time since he broke his thigh in a la!! on the RiMera a year ago. He made no comment. Friends said he would naturally not dis cuss a matier which a the sole ' y v , "Si, and has been already signed by 20 members of Die House. The resolution will also ask thatl $35,000 be appropriated for the committee out of stale game funds to finance the study. The resolution asks for an in terim committee to study man agement of wildlife rcsurces of the state including the source, vol ume and use of public funds being spent on all phases f game man agement. It also reads, "Tlic study shall also include Ihe planning and pro gramming of public agencies in volved in protecting, preserving. propagating and promoting the wildlife resources of the stale. The resolution provides that the committee shall report back to the next session of the legislature . All three Klamath County legis lators reported that they felt this would provide an agency which could give the public an opportun ity to be heard on suggestions Chief Killed By Highwayman BLOWING ROCK, N.C. IUPI) The police chief of this resort town high in the Blue Ridge moun tains was shot to death today when he apparently hailed a sus picious car along a lonely moun tain road. The officer, William D. Greene, 28. called for help over his police car radio and managed to whisper the identity of his assailants short ly before he died in a hospital three hours later. A search was immediately launched in four counties for two men believed responsible for the crime. Aulhoritics said Greene, police chief here for seven years, may have been shot to death in a gun hallle. concern at this point of the Amer ican Congress. Y'oung's resolution is co-sponsor ed by Sen. Frank J Lausche, D Ohio, and Estes Kefauver. D Tenn. Several vears ago the Sen ate passed a resolution lauding Churchill or his long career as a world slate-man. If Sir Winston is made an hon orary American citizen it will add another distinction lo his fantas tic career as the world's most Imnorod man. He already hjs a number of American awards including hon orary citizenship of Jacksonville. Fla., the g-;ld medal of tlie city of New York, the Franklin medal of the city of Philadelphia and honorary life membership of the Friendship Veterans Fire Knginc Company of Alexandria, Va i relative to programs on wildlife management. They said, "The public will then be able to be heard relative to the manner in which game resources are being managed, and the com mittee's task will be to deter mine if any improper program ming is being effected, and de termine what the objectives of the game management people are. All three' expressed confidence' that the measure would find suc cess in both houses of the legis laturc. Long Budget Fight Seen WASHINGTON IUPD -Repub lican attacks on President Ken nedy's record budget pointed to day to a session-long battle that could figure heavily in hopes for a substantial tax cut. . Democratic leaders defended the President's $08.8 billion spend ing plan, with its $11.9 billion def icit, as essential to national se curity and. economic progress. But GOP members on both sides of the Capitol denounced it as irresponsible, misleading, rad ical, and calculated to take the nation closer to fiscal disaster. From their concentrated attack it was apparent that the Repub lican members thought they knew a good thing when they saw it, and they were, not about to let Ihe chance pass. Some influential Democrats joined the Republicans in de nouncing the plan. They said I here was little chance for a lax cut unless the budget is trimmed drastically. Several Democratic leaders called tlie budget progres sive and sound, but they were in the minority. Chairman Clarence Cannon, D- Mo., of the House Appropriations Committee said the budget was unbalanced because "we are lending money we do not have to on things we could get along without." He scheduled a com mittee meeting Monday to start studying the budget. House Republican leader Char les A. Halleck, Ind., said the budg et "makes a mockery of the ad ministration's brave talk of letting the taxpayer keep more of his own money through tax reduction What the taxpayer thinks he will save will be taken away Irom him cilher by so-called 'tax reform' or by an increase in the cost of living." Plane Missing SALT LAKE CITY L'PI Search began at dawn today for a missing West Coast Airlines F27 propict with three men aboard which disappeared Thursday on a training flight near the Great Salt Lake.' The plane disappeared while on a checkout flight for a veteran airlines pilot. It also carried an agency inspector. For Early Peace In Dock Walkout By United Press International A presidential board i.eld opti mism today lor a quick settle ment of the Atlantic and Gulf Coast dock strike. New York and Cleveland remained without regu lar newspapers, and a transit strike in Philadelphia went into its fourth day. Across the nation, more than 100,000 workers were idled by an outbreak of labor troubles. Near ly every part of the land felt the effects. Sen. Wayne Morse, D-Ore., head of President Kennedy's pan el and a former mediator, said he planned to meet separately to day with the New York Shipping Association and the International Longshoremen's Association. Morse said he thought there had been "considerable progress" in the lengthy dispute which erupted into a walkout 26 days ago. The longshoremen are ask ing a 55-ccnt wage increase and have been offered a 23-ccnt hour ly package. Awaiting Word New Orleans, La., Mayor Vic tor Schiro said he and U other Gulf port mayors were awaiting word from Assistant Secretary of Labor Daniel P. Moynihan wheth er to go to Washington to pjr ticipate in the talks. Banana handler locals in New Orleans continued unloading ships despite attempts by union atlor ncys to have a federal court back-to-work order staved. U.S. Dist. Judge Frank B. Ellis granted the Injunction after the National Labor Relations Board said Uie unions should be ordered - ( SHRIMP BOAT MUTINY The FBI Is holding 35-year-old Jim Sprayberry, right, in connection with reports that he forced two other men overboard from a shrimp boat in the Gulf of Mexico. Sprayberry is shown as he prepares to step over the rail of the Coast Guard Cutter Dione that brought him into the Galveston base. UPI Telephoto Captain Of Shrimp Boat Forced To Leave Ship GALVESTON. Tex. 'UPD-i James Sprayberry, 37, of Sulphur Springs, Fla.. was charged with assault on the high seas Thurs day night for forcing a shrimp boat captain and a crew mem ber overboard. Sprayberry told the Coast Guard that he forced the two men overboard because he feared for his life. The Coast Guard said the act occurred last Sunday tn the bay of Campeche off the coast of Mexico on the shrimp boat "Three G' ." Walter R. McCarthy, 30. cap tain of the "Three G's." and sec ond male Robert G. Sieves, 29. said Sprayberry, the first male, went berserk Sunday afternoon and was tied up. They said he lo fulfill terms of an unsigned contract. Longshoremen in Port Ever glades, Fla., put aside their strike and loaded 868 tons of ran som supplies aboard Ihe freighter S.S. Shirley Lykcs to pay Fidel Castro for the freedom of Bay of Pigs prisoners. No new negotiations were scheduled in New York between striking printers and the publish ers of nine metropolitan dailies Talks between the two principal parties broke off Thursday in the 42-day-old strike. Try Another Meeting Federal mediators said they would be in touch with both tlic printers and the publishers in an attempt to have another meeting as quickly as possible. Negotiations were to continue today at Cleveland between tlic American Newspaper Guild and Ihe Press and Plain Dealer pub lishers. With the strike in its eighth week, talks failed again Thurs day. The guild has been striking one day less than the Teamsters. The Cleveland Record will make its debut Monday. It will be published five times a week by nine AKL-CIO unions em ployed at the two newspapers, The Teamsters agreed to handle deliveries. In Philadelphia, mediators hoped an "exclusively new" pro posal to union and management would settle the strike of buses, subways and elevated employes, More than 5,600 workers are idle, and a million Philadelphia riders are using other means of trans portation. -.1 ' A':f"-''9W f later broke loose and put them overboard. It was not made clear by the Coast Guard whether the men were forced into tlie water onto another boat. Sprayberry was brought to Gal veston County Jail under $1,000 bond. The Dione carried statements from McCarthy and Nieves when it docked at Galveston. The two men, who retook com mand of the SO-fool shrimper have been out of radio contact a'X) miles away in the Gulf of Mexico. W. W. Gore of Frceport Tex., owner of the boat, said he has been trying lo establish con tact by radio-telephone ever since the incident was reported. AGED HEARINGS A special Senate Committee on Aging continued hearings to day on what can be done about one of the growing haiards of old age fraudulent , schemes aimed at the retired person's pocketbook. Among the witnesses were, left to right, Food and Drug Commissioner George P. Larrick; Dr. Ethel Percy Andrus, presi dent of the American Association of Retired Persons; and Paul Rand Dixon, chairman of the Federal Trade Commission. UPI Telephoto State To Install Rails On Canal Hiahwav An official of the State Highway Department told the' Herald and News Friday morning that guard -ails will be installed along tlic stretch of U.S. 97 soulh in tlic can al stretch between Klamath Falls and Dorris. It was learned from the depart ment Friday morning that five miles of guard rails A ill be in stalled as soon as contracts can be let on tlic project. Plans call for installation of the guard rails on the canal side of Ihe highway. The department is still studying whether they want to install guard rails on the oilier side which borders the railroad tracks, or use the same amount of moner to resurfa the stretch of highway It is estimated that the guard Liquor, Tax Bills Read In Senate SALEM (UPI) Bills to do away with liquor permits and to give World War I veterans a tax exemption on their homes were read today in the Oregon Senate. The resolution tn replace Ore gon s century-old constitution wiui brand new one was formally In troduced In the House. The senate also received a se ries of bills relating to forests, while other House bills included one to make taxes on coopera tives payable sooner. New bills and organizational meetings of committees made up the bulk of activity as the first week of the 52nd legislative assembly drew to a close. Both houses adjourned this morning until Monday. Layman Affirmed -The Senate affirmed the ap pointment of George Layman of Ncwbcrg to the State Board of Higher Education. I-ayman is a former Republican state represent ative, and was chairman of the commission that rewrote Ihe con stitution. He succeeds Doug McKean, po litical editor of the Oregon Jour nal, who resigned in order to cov er the legislative session where higher education will be active in seeking more money. Sen. Andrew Natcrlin, D New port, who sponsored the bill to abolish liquor permits, described Ihe permits as an irritation tn tourists. He said neighboring states do not have them. Naterlin said increased liquor purchases by oul-of-stalers would make up for Uie $'WX),noo lost in permit fees. Vets Kxrmptlnn Sought The veterans' measure would give World War I vlernns homestead tax exemption up to $7,500 of the true cash value of their homes, similar lo those given to the veterans of earlier wars. The forest bills included measure to let the Board of For estry conlracl for fire protection of range and grasslands as well as forest lands. They also included a measure to let the stale forester collect fees (or Ihe use of state roads and for easements over slate lands. rails will cost about $80,000 on Ihe canal side, and that it will cost another $80,000 to put them on the railroad side. As against this latter $80,000, it will cost about $1)0,000 to resurface that same stretch of highway. The district engineer is work ing up cost figures on the project, and Uie department will shortly call for bids on the guard rails for Uie canal side. The official estimated that con struction on the guard rails could get underway in March. Money lor the project will come from special stale funds The stretch of highway has been hazard for many years, and a number of persons have Idst their lives along this stretch when thelr vehicles went off the highway into the deep waters of the can al which border ft. Recently, two persons lost their lives in separate accidents on (his stretch. Dec. 19, Mrs. Blanche A. Mc- C u 1 1 e n, Bakersfield, drowned when the car she was in skidded off into the canal, and Dec. 24, Mrs. Rosemary Williams, Seattle, died when the car in which she passenger Went into the Howe Happy With Posts Rep. Carrol Howe expressed ex treme satisfaction Friday on his appointment to the Legislative F'iscal Committee. He indicated that this Is a per manent standing committee and selection to the committee is con sidered quite an honor. Howe indicated that as i mem ber of the House Education Com mittee he is going to push for some effective curbs on the ac tivities of the State Department of Education. "This is necessary." he told the Herald and News, "to make cer tain that educational programs are achieved at the district level and not at the state level." It was learned today, also, that Rep. George Flitcraft has been appointed to the Interstate Cooper ation Committee in addition to his other committee posts. Americans Receive Record $440 Billion In Personal Income WASHINGTON (UPD- Ameri cans received a record $440.3 billion in personal Income last year, tlie Commerce Department said today. This was $24 billion, or I per rent, above 1961, the previous peak year. On a seasonally adjusted basis. December Income reached an an nual rale of H50 billion, $225 billion above November. Gains in wages and salaries accounted for $1 billion of tlie rise. Personal income includes wages and salaries, net income of pro prietorships, dlvklends, Interest, net rents and other types of indi vidual income. Guard canal when the hood flew up blinding her husband, driver of the vehicle. An appeal was made to the de partment several years ago be cause of previous incidents and guide lights were installed in the stretch. In March, 1962, the Herald and News asked the department to study this stretch and install guard rails and, if possible, have the canal lowered during the winter period. The department, at that time, promised to study the stretch, and pointed out that they con curred in the hazardous condition, and would take some action when funds were available. Legislators Laud Lobby SALEM (UPI) Registration of lobbyists was termed unnecessary today by both the president of the Senate and speaker of the House. Sen. Ben Musa, D-The Dalles, and Rep. Clarence Barton, D-Co-quille, explained their views after Sen. Edward Fadcley , D-Eugene, announced he would introduce a lobby registration -measure. We have been fortunate with our lobbyists," Musa said. "We have a high class third House. I haven't observed any dirty lobby policies. A legislator should be able to stand on his own two legs or he shouldn't have run for office. I can't tee what purpose is to bo served by registering lobbyists." Barton commented he'd vote against registration. "We're a close knit family up here. I have seen no abuses. It's the amateur lobbyists that bother me. They aren't as well prepared, and their answers to questions are not as forthright." Both Musa and Barton an nounced they had adopted the practice of sending fiscal bills to substantive committees for "poli cy" decisions before turning them over to the Ways and Means Com mittee. Both said they felt the pol icy decisions should be made be fore fiscal needs were determined. The report said the disposable income available for spending and saving last year was $83 billion. a gain of 5 per cent over 1961. The Increase in disposable income was not as great at the over-all gain, the department said, be cause Individual income taxes, and other personal taxes, were higher than Of the $24 billion over-all gain in 19(3, $17 billion was In wages and salaries. Manufacturing pay rolls were up 7 per cent, durable goods industries 9 per cent and nondurable goods Industries showed 4.S per cent rise. 1