P'll- HERALD AND NEWS. Klamath Falls, Ore. Friday, January 18, 1963 National Religious Conference Asks For End To Discrimination CHICAGO (UPIWewish, Cath olic and Protestant religious lead ers, speaking with one voice, called Thursday for an end to racial discrimination because ill was immoral and "an insult to God." In a historic united pica, the religious leaders ended the four day National Conference in Rcli gion and Race with an "appeal to conscience." "Racism is our most serious1 domestic evil," they said. "We must eradicate it with all dili gence and speed." They admitted churches and synagogues "have been slow" to enter the struggle for justice And they also indicted all sections of the country North, South, East and West tor practicing scgrega tion. "We repent our failures and ask the forgiveness of God, de clared the statement adopted by the 700 delegates to the confer ence. "We ask also the forgive ness of our brothers, whose rights i we have ignored and whose dig nity we have offended. ' We call upon all the American people to work, to pray and to act courageously in the cause ol human equality and dignity while there is still time to eliminate racism permanently and (led sively." Adopts Specific Proposals The conference backed up the words with a program of specifics that called for religious bodies to: Help Negro families obtain homes in all white neighborhoods. Work for the "stabilization" of changing neighborhoods in the inner city. Invest pension and endowment funds in such projects as inter racial housing developments that will promote "equality of opportunity." Insist that all contracts for church construction or supplies in clude a pledge of no job discrim ination. Arrange for opportunities for whites and Negroes to meet on Red Chinese Fire Attack On Soviet 'DENNIS THE MENAGE' BERLIN (UPI) Communist Chinese delegate Wu Hsiu-chuan launched a bitter attack against the Soviet Union at the East German Communist congress to day but was drowned out by a storm of booing, stomping and catcalling. East Berlin Communis boss Paid Verner, who was presiding. ordered Wu to stop his diatribe. saying it "did not correspond to the norms of relations between Marxist-Leninist parties." Most Wostcrn newsmen were barred from the Congress during the Wu speech but details of the stormy session leaked out. ; The East German Communist radio and ADN news agency at first carried only a bare summary of Wu's speech, d e letlngref- KPCA Meet plates Talk By Growney ; ' Louis P. Growney, Industrial development engineer for Pacific Power It Light Company, will be! the guest speaker at the 29th an nual meeting of the stockholders of the Klamath Production Credit Association. ! The meeting will be held in the Cafeteria 'of Klamath Union High; School with the complimentary luncheon to be supervised by Mrs. LaVcrn Smith and Mrs. Merle Brown of the cafeterial stall at .noon on Saturday, Jan 26. Two directors will be elected to fill the expired terms of Lee llolliday of Kcno and Wilbur Jlninsbergor of Henley. Tom t'Tcy. chairman of the nomi-i n.itniR committee, announces the selection ol the incumbents togeth er with Stanley C. Masten Jr. ol Toe Valley and Bruce D. Martin C( Fort Jones, Calif., as candi jlites. - Holdover directors are Murcl Long. Lower Klamath; Randall Tope, Merrill: W. M. Williams. Klamath Falls: A. R. Campbell, Klamalh Falls; and John V. With ers. Paisley. - Members and guests w ill be en lertaincd by Scv Garcia, band di rector, Merrill schools, and by Jerry Arpetsinger, student ol Klamalh Union High School, with bis foals of magic. Shirley Bun nell Zlabrk of Tulelake will play Hie orfjnn during the luncheon erences to attacks against Russia Later, after West Berlin radio stations broadcast reports on the Chinese speech, ADN said be latedly: "During his speech, Wu directed attacks against brother parties and guests of the congress As a result, disturbances resulted in the hall." West Berlin radio report said Verner tried to stop Wu w hen he exceeded the 30-minutc lime limit allowed guest speakers, but Wu blandly ignored him. Verner was said to have described Wu's remarks as "ob jectionable and provocative." Communist sources were quoted as saying Wu's blast was an ap parent rejection by Red China o Premier Nikita Khrushchev's ap peal two days ago for a mora torium on further polemics inside the Communist parties. Wu was reported to have at tacked Yugoslavia by name as a "revisionist" meaning a Commu nist regime which changes poli cies laid down by Marx and Lenin. Just as the Soviet bloc attacks Albania when It means Red China so the Chinese Communists use Yugoslavia to. mask their criti cisms of the Soviet Union. minim TONIGHT FROM 6:43 ' Cfitinuvt St. A Sun, tnm .12:4 NOW. ..ADD A MOTION PICTURE TO THE WONDERS OF THE WORLD 1 1 equal status" and get to know each other as human beings. Solicit "open occupancy" lious- ing pledges and establish "service centers to bring together buyers and sellers who arc w illing to inle grate their community." Help conduct voter rcgistra tion drives among Negroes in the South. Stress "education for racial justice" in all church-related schools, including Sunday schools, Use the pulpit for hard-hitting sermons on practical racial prob lems. Seek Negro Workers "Actively seek" Negroes to serve on the staff of church related institutions. Use church funds to facilitate mortgage financing for Negro home buyers. Demand that all federal grants including aid to school: and hospitals be given on the condition of "assurance of non discriminatory a d m i s s i o n pol icies. The leaders said it was time for churches and synagogues to lead, not follow in the transi tion to an integrated society tven worse," the joint state ment said, in conceding the majorj faiths had been timid in racial matters, "religious institutions have participated in perpetuating segregation in their own houses of worship, schools, hospitals, wcl fare institutions and fraternal or ganizations." The conference called for es lablishmcnt of local intcrfaith or gan:ations to tackle specific por tions of 'lie action program, It said plans already were un derway for creation of such intcr faith machinery in New York, Chicago, Detroit, Atlanta, New Orleans, San Francisco, Oailand Pittsburgh, St. Louis, Seattle and San Antonio, Tex. JtaYttteilller To Allow For Appeal SALEM UP! - Condemned child slayer Jeannace June Free man received her second stay of execution Thursday just 12 days before she was scheduled to enter Oregon's gas chamber for the slaying of a 6-year-old boy. The stay was granted by the Oregon Supreme Court to allow her attorneys time to tile a peti Weather Roundup , AND GOD BLESS MOTHER.WHO CAM MAKE SWEU. PANCAKES, IPSHE SETS p IH TIME Former Officer Appeals Conviction Of Spying Demos Seek $ Million From Party WASHINGTON iUPH - Demo crats expect to gross about 1 million from tonight's second an niversary celebration of President Kennedy's inauguration. The net take will not be known until the expenses are paid but a profit of more than Moo.ono should pay off the party's debts and put it into the black. Tonight's celebration is part oi three-day set of meetings at tended by national committee members, state chairmen ami other party bigwigs from through out tlie country. The President and Mrs. Kenne dy, the vice president and Mrs Lyndon B. Johnson will attend a dinner with 400 to son other guests, most of whom contributed $1,000 to the party treasury. The host is Bedford Wynn, a wealthy Texan. Alter the- dinner, these guests will mingle with about 6.000 otliers who paid $100 a seat to attend an entertainment spectacle at the National Guard Armory. Some government cmphnes have complained that tlicy have been under too much pressure to buy tickets for the Jtoo function The White House has relused to comment on tliese charges Broadway producer Richard Ad ler imported tolenl from Britain France and Spain fr the show (iene Kelly and Kirk Douglas will he masters of ceremonies. Other stars appearing will be George Burns. Carol dunning and Carol Burnett. Fraud Probe Seen Needed By Elderly WASHINGTON 'UPD-Sen. Pat McNamara. D-Mich., said today there may be a full-scale Senate investigation into land frauds that lie 6aid have fleeced elderly peo ple of millions of dollars. McNamara. chairman of the special committee on aging, said after a three-day hearing into quackery as it affects the aged uncovered such w idespread abuses that the committee planned fur ther investigations. He said one aspect that needed exploring further was the sale of submarginal land, particularly in western slates, to retired people through misleading advertising. Sen. Barry Goldwater, R-Ariz., said violations involving Ariiona land had been particularly fla grant and tlie committee should call land promoters to testify. Federal Trade Commission Chairman Paul Rand Dixon told the committee Thursday that the FTC w as investigating advertising that has led retired people to put their lite savings into worthless lots. Dixon said the problem was of national concern. Much of tlie promotional lilera lure is "highly deceptive" because it does not give full details and ontain "actual misrepresenta tions, he !.aid. "Tlierc are unscrupulous opera tors attempting lo capitalize on tlie desire of all lo have a plot of land where they may spend their later years in contentment, Dixon said Dr. F.lhel Percy Andrus. piesi denl of the National Association of Retired Persons, told llw com mittee that many elderly persons remain so convuiced of fake gim micks such as lieallh lads llicy refuse lo give them up she told the committee thai alter an article in her oi Raima lion s magazine, Modern Maturity by Food and Drug Commissioner lieurgc P. l-arriik on fraud the group was criticized by oldsters as "traitors to the older people. Fvcn juxiol ol lraud will not necessai ily convince tlie elderly they have been swindled, slie said. WASHINGTON (UPD- A spy thriller could be rewritten into a case of bad judgment if an Air Force review board accepts the plea of former Capt. Joseph P. kauffman, 44. The ex-officer is under a 20- year prison sentence on charges of providing military information to tlie East German Communists. According to George Lattimer, Salt Lake City, former U.S. Court of Appeals judge who represents Kauffman in this appeal, it was a case of "happenstance, mixed up with stupidity. Kauffman was convicted in Germany last April 18 after a court martial. The principal wit ness against him was a German Commiuiist defector named Gun ther Maennel, 29, who appeared in disguise. Lattimer said Maennel wore a false mustache, hair pieces and stage make up, and looked like a movie star. Tlie disguise was imposed to protect him and his family in East Germany, but Lat timer claimed it also created an atmosphere of intrigue prejudicial to Ihe trial. There were other mysterious overtimes, Lattimer told the re view board Thursday. These in cluded a system for signalling witness when they could or could not answer questions, and wani ng them when llicy got close to classified information, he said. Lattimer also said Kauflman's home was "burglarized" four times by Air Force investigators and that he was shanghaied to Germany when he could have had a trial by jury in the United Slates. Kauffman. a bachelor, fell into! German Communist hands while vacationing in Europe. He was be tween duty at Sondrestrom, Greenland, and Castle Air Force Base, Merced, Calif., when he took a prohibited train for Berlin His presence on the train was a violation of Communist rules and also of an Air Force regu lation, under which he could have gotten a two-year sentence. Lat timer said he didn't know this un til he was taken from the train by two German agents. The agents, Maennel and a man identified as Hans Bergman, ques tioned him for four days. He re fused to give information to a Soviet agent, Lattimer said, but talked to Germans, who were friendly, and visited them three or four times after his release in East Berlin. Maennel, who defected to the West a year later, testified that information concerning Green land that came from Kauffman at the time was of no value. But he said Kauffman agreed to gath c4 military information and to re turn with it to East Berlin this year 1963. A key point in dispute at the rehearing was whether or not Kauffman knew the Germans were Communist agents before his last meeting with them. The review board is expected to re turn a decision in three to six weeks. Film Shown At Kiwanis Lt. Tom Hanlin, Information Officer at Kingsley Field, dcliv cred the introductory comments of a film, "Seconds for Survival, shown during a luncheon meet ing of Ihe Klamath Falls Kiwanis International Club held Thursday at the Winema Motor Hotel. Chaplain (Cant.) Jellerson E. Davis was in charge of the day's program and was one of two oth er ofliccrs from Kingsley Field who attended the meeting. They were Lieutenants James H. De laney and Raymond P. Conley. Clubs and organizations are re minded that the 40Bth Fighter Group maintains a speaker's bu reau, and will gladly assist pro gram planners with the presents tion of a well prepared Air Force lopic. Clubs are invited to call base extension 503 for the dee service. Award Given At Kingsley Leslie E. Hawkins, a Kingsley Field aircralt sheet metal worker, has been presented three cash awards totaling $00 for as many beneficial suggestions to improve methods . and save time and money. Col. Edwin J. Witzcnburgcr, commander of tne air field, pre sented the checks and compliment ed Hawkins for his contributions lo the incentive awards program. Hawkins received $50 for sug gesting the fabrication of a de vice to hold the F-lo: speed brake in position during maintenance; $15 for designing a tool to re move screws from difficult loca tions, and $15 for suggesting the use of a drill press clamp. A federal employe for 19 years, Hawkins has been at Kingsley Field since 191. He works in the fabrication branch of the 408th Consolidated Aircralt Maintenance Squadron, under the supervision of Tech. Sgt. Bruce C. Henderson : TOIHISIIl CURJlSiBBSmiTR P0llth iHy Itittpt St 1 J SwfHlCf Itrvintj ltxMMm ort NOfiMm Clliferfli HAROLOHfCHT imsedim -CHRISTINE KAUf MANN J. LEE7kA(PS0M HttMhtCHT KUmttk Puftlufcinf CvmMir Mam at ft Pi" TUiM 4 Hit W. r twMtitmi, pvtuthar t mc at Kiamam fan, Orttn an Avtvtf It. im. vMlar at t Con- rau. Mirth J. ta't ixna-iem ?- at NM at Kiamatu Oftfl. t4 Of tM"aal twniitif ,. lUMCHirTlON RATH Carrltr 1 Mmrt I MMtM 1 Yaar MH Hi AtfvaMt I Mant Mantht 1 Yaar Carrtar 4 Otalari WMkifav 4 SwMav. ctv U MIT ID Mill INTMNATIONAl AuniT lUlllli OP CIRCULATION fvOKrlton m mtivmt utiivarr 1 on ffttir HaraM mm tw, piaaM pnaMa, , 1 Tl III M 111 M I I Tl , I'l M HIM tr Morrill Grange Holds Meeting MKIilill.L-Mcrnll Grange met .l.in. U at tlie recreation lull, with .Inn llrudsliiiw. master, con ducting llie meeting M.ugoiie Nownli.ini. legislative iliairin.iii, c.tvc reiwls on zon ing and on the T.ipavers' League A rrpoit'on Pomona Giange was given by Anna Howard, home eco nomic chati man. ami she also announced tli.it M.irione Neivn liam was to serve rclroshmcnts at the next meeting. Eugene Ncwnham, lecturer, pre- srntod Fran k llowaid. w ho showed his color slides and told of his tup to South America and !o Iti vce anil Zion canvons. The next meeting will be held II al 8 p m. in the iccrca- Eddie Plans Ho Divorce HOLLYWOOD ilTP - F.ddie Fisher said Thursdav he had no immediate plans for divorcing his wile. KliMhflh Taylor, but would not stand in the way if she in tends to marry iticiiard nurton. However, Fisher said he knew nothing of reports from London that Burton's wile. .Sybil, would divorce the handsome Welsh ac tor, freeing luni to many Mis lavlor ' This is the first I heard about it," Fisher said when contacted by I'nitcd Press International. "Three davs ago our business ac countant came hack Irom Ixindon and said she 'Miss T.ivlor' was not going lo seek a divoice al this time. Trial Faced By Welfare Probe Chief NEW YORK (UPD-The man who gained fame in his campaign against alleged welfare chiselcrs in N'ewburgh, N.Y., goes on trial March 4 on a charge of soliciting a $20,000 bribe. Date for the state Supreme Court trial of Joseph McD Mitchell, self-suspended city man agcr of Newburgh, was set by Justice Joseph A. Sarafite Thurs day. Mitchell and a codefendant ac cused as a go between, Lawrence De Masi II, Hillsdale. N.J., ap peared in court with their attor neys. Mitchell has been free on $10,000 bail, and real estate man De Masi is free on $3,000 bail. Mitchell was arrested Dec. 7 by New York city detectives. He was accused of demanding the $20,000 as the price for his support of a zoning law change. . Authorities said Mitchell asked Ihe money from Stephen and Jo seph Wahrhaftig, Monticello, N.Y., who wanted their 11-acre property in a one-family home area rezoned for multidwclling use. Mitchell stirred a national con troversy in 1961 when he ordered a crackdown, later ruled illegal. on so-called chiselers. He faces a 10-year jail term and $3,000 fine on each of four counts if convicted. 4-H Slates New Studies LAKEVIEW - Prospective 4-H Club members will have an op portunity next week to enroll in two of the newest 4-H projects of fered, according to John Kiesow county extension agent. Mrs. Burton Chambers will lead a 4-H Dog Club providing at least five boys or girls sign up. An organizational meeting is scheduled (or 4:45 p.m. at the county extension office in the courthouse on Monday, Jan. 21. All interested persons should at lend this meeting. Kiesow points out that mem hers will learn about breeds of dogs, feeding, care, responsibili tics of a dog owner, and how to groom and show their dogs. A 4-H dog obedience contest will be scheduled for the county fair. Tie second new club lo be or ganized will be a 4-H Square Dance Club. To be eligible for membership, a boy or girl must have been 12 years old by Jan. of this year. Prospective mem bers should attend the organ izational meeting Wednesday, Jan. 23, 7 p.m., at tlie Eagle Lodge Hall. Mr. and Mrs. Hank Kuempel and Amelia Gawronski will lead the club. Laughton Wife Named In Will LOS ANGELES iL'PI '-Actress Elsa Lanchcstcr was the sole ben eficiary in Ihe will of her late husband, actor Charles Laughton. I-aughton. who died Dec. 13 after a long battle against cancer, left his entire estate lo his wile in the one-pace will admitted to pro- bale Thursday. The estate was valued "in ex cess of $to.ixx)' and his annual income was estimated at more than $12.0(10. Senator Said Labor Traitor PORTLAND (UPD- Sen. Mau rine Neuberger, D-Ore., was de scribed as "a traitor to the cause of labor" Thursday by a maritime union spokesman. Frank Fellows, president of the Portland area council of the Mari time Trades Department, said his group was angrv over legislation Mrs. Neuberger introduced to per mit foreign flag ships to enler U.S. intercoastal trades "while American ships are rotting away in laid-up fleets and thousands of American seamen are unem ployed." tion with the U.S. Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas ex tended to Mai'ch 15 the deadline for filing the petition with the U.S. high court. If tlie U. S. Supreme Court grants a writ of certiorari, it as sumes jurisdiction in the case and w ill accept an appeal on Miss Freeman's behalf. Thus Miss Freeman's present stay could extend for a year or more depending on what action the high court takes. The stay came as a wave of opposition to her execution began lo swell. The governor's office announced that more than 40 letters a day on the Freeman case were being received. There has been a rash of editorial comment and letters to tne editors in newspapers throughout the stale during the past two weeks. Most opposed the execution. Miss Freeman, 21, was first; scheduled to die Dec. 6. A stay to Jan. 29 was granted by tlie Jefferson County Circuit Court at Madras so her attorneys would have time to determine whether to appeal to the U.S. high court. After Justice Douglas extended the appeal deadline to March 15, Miss Freeman's attorneys peti tioned the Oregon court to stay the scheduled Jan. 29 execution to match the federal timetable. Miss Freeman was convicted of, slaying Larry Jackson in Central Oregon in 1961 by throwing him into the Crooked River Gorge Larry's mother, Mrs. Gertrude Nunez Jackson, 33, pleaded guilty to Killing Larry s 4-year-old sis ter, Martha Mae. at the same lime. She was sentenced to life in prison. Northern California: Fair through Saturday .with fog and low clouds coast. Five-Day Weather Western Oregon: Highs 35-43 and lows 25-35; light precipitation of rain and rain or snow mixed mostly after Sunday. Eastern Oregon: Highs mostly 22-32 and lows 12-22; light snow- flurries mostly after Sunday. Field Mice Hike Noted At Lakeview I LAKEVIEW Field mice num-1 bers are definitely building up in certain areas of Lake County, according to a report by Bill .Moser, county agent. Now is the time to act as the pesky little animal is capable of doing ex tensive damage to alfalfa fields, pastures, and native hay mea dows, he said. Once field mouse populations build up enough to be easily no ticed, they 'are capable of ex ploding into large devastating masses. The animals multiply rapidly as they breed several times a year, producing litters of Irom six to 10 each. Unless control measures are ex ercised to slop mouse buildups. Ihese small creatures can destroy and damage many, acres of val uable crops. Effective control measures have been developed. Through use of various poison baits, field mice can be con trolled. In certain areas of Lake County field mice have been con trolled through use of zinc phos phide treated grain. The zinc phosphide trealment requires special mixing and the material is difficult to obtain Farmers and ranchers having mouse problems should contact the County Extension Office in Lakeview for information about mouse baits. The zinc phosphide is not now available but can be ordered through the office. Moser said this is a good time to take action against Ihe mice because their food supply is lim iled. As spring comes on and crops begin to grow tlie mice have an abundance of food, con sequently It becomes difficult to get them to take poison baits. Space Germ Danger Seen By Scientist LOS ANGELES IUPD-A sci entist warned Thursday that it is conceivable that microscopic life forms from another planet could cling to returning space craft and destroy life on earth. Dr. Soloman W. Golomb. of California Institute of Technol ogy, said a life form inadvertent ly imported to earth might have the capability of successfully competing with earth forms for the basic raw materials of life "There's been a great deal of thought given to preventing con tamination of the moon and plan ets during visits by earth space vehicles, but an even greater problem entirely overlooked is what about microscopic organ isms carried to the earth on re turn flights." Golomb, who spoke at the clos ing day session of the ninth an nual American Astionautical So ciety, said there is little reason to believe that alien life forms woqld be more efficient than earth forms in the struggle for survival, but that it is a poten tial danger that must be recog nized. Dr. Fred L. Whipple, vice prcs ident of the society and director of Smilhsonian Astrophysical Ob servatory, voiced a grim possibil ity that a meteor colliding with the earth could trigger a nuclear war. "There is no way I know of tracking a meteor," he said. "There is no advance notice of one crashing to the earth. No one knows when the next one will hit. We can only hope that when it happens again someone will not push the panic button and launch a nuclear war." "Twice in this century objects big enough to look like nuclear blasts hit this planet in 1903 in Siberia and in 1947 near Vladi vostok i both in the Soviet Un ion I." v Ramono Soto Tour Planned Miss Indian America, Ramono Soto of Klamath Falls, home for a few days on vacation, will leave for appearances in JJew York City, immediately following mid-term exams at Sheridan Col lege, Sheridan, Wyo. She has spent a few days with her mother, Mrs. Florinda Soto, this city. The talented young woman, pre paring for a career in law, will peak at colleges and universities in costume on Indian tribes, of America. She will make the trip by air and will remain in New York for three weeks. Appoint ments are made for her speaking engagements during the year she reigns as a national I'gure by her manager. Her chaperone'on the New York trip will be Mrs. M. E. Miggct. one of the judges when Ramona was elected as titular head of all Inrlian tribes in Amer ica. Her trip is sponsored by the New York Life Insurance Co. Miss Indian America is a grad uate of Klamath Union High School. Ski Report Timberline: Total snow 36 ini es, one inch new; carry chaii Betsy Tow and Double Chair op ating. Mt. Bachelor: Total snow inches, no new; temperature at 7 a.m.; skiing poor except downhill runs: Palma and n tows enly operating. Temperatures during the hours ending at 4 a.m. PST tod Astoria had .16 inch of rain. Astoria Baker Brookings Medford Newport North Bend Pendleton Portland Redmond Salem The Dalles Chicago Los Angeles New York San Fran Washington High 48 33 51 23 47 50 41 '15 43 45 47 34 63 43 55 52 X-15 Hears Record High EDWARDS AFB, Calif. (UPI Chief space agency pilot , Walker shot the X15 rocket s 31 miles into space Thursday the second highest flight e made by a winged aircraft. Walker's flight to 270,000 f was only nine miles below XlS's world airplane altitude r ord of nearly 60 miles, set 1 year by Air Force Maj. I White. His near-record climb also ' lually proved a new method gaining more control for re-en from space by removing the X lower tail fin. "It was a major step tow much higher flights into spac the veteran research pilot s after streaking the "manned n sile" 3,716 miles an hour m than a mile a second. The previous secondhigl: mark was nearly 47 miles, h by Walker and White. Walker so is the world's fastest fly aircraft pilot, having flashed X15 to a record 4,195 m.p.h. During Thursday's soaring fli Walker experienced weighUe ness for two to three minutes the X15 shot "over the top" ii ballistic arc. His body also i subjected to five times the fo of gravity. Tlie test was the most vanced to date in a series to c firm the belief of space scient that elimination of the lewer fin provides greater stability returning from space. The lo fin, one of four at the ship's t was designed, ironically, to crease stability. Chamber Dinne Set On Jan. 28 CHILOQULN The dinner mi ing of the Chiloquin Chamber Commerce will be held Mond Jan. 28, and not Jan. 18 as viously announced. Five new reclors will be elected lo Board of Directors at the 7 p event in the Masonic Hall. Electricity equivalent to the h of 429 men is used by the aver, American factory worker c; dav. For Professional TREE SERVICE Baker's Nurserj Call TU 2-3513 Top gold producer in Ihe United States is the Homestake mine at Lead. S.D. INCOME TAXES Comt in and ui CHAS. HATHAWAY MATERNITY SALE MOOSE CRAB FEED SAT., JAN. 19th Sr.nt Starts ! 7 P.M. $130 Pef Pfrien DANCI TO FOLLOW WINTER FLYING SPECIAL! LEARN TO FLY i ! $99 . . . Inquiries invited concfrft tnf flytni club. Chtrtfrt Pilot Trtininjj Ground School Multi Inline Cowrie. Klamath Aircraft KIm,iK Fall! Airport PH. TU 2-4111 j Morernity i BLOUSES Maternity DRESSES $99 $9 Were 3.95 to 8.95 Were 14.93 to 22.98 THE MUSIC MAN in Klamath Falls, he's Eddie Butler, now playing nightly at the Round Table dining. room end lounge. Eddie's music at the organ it superb . . . and the additional sound effects are terrific. Stop in soon! Winema Motor Hotel 1111 Main Street t lUiaa Mill ara 1 p.m. um