PAGE J HERALD AND POLAR LAND VISITORS Ths polar bear at Portland Zoo is amazed to tea visitors from his homeland performing an Eskimo dance in front of his pool. This Eskimo man and wife are traveling throughout the United States to publicize Alaska Airlines tours in the 49th state. UPI Telephoto GAPITOL MEMO Oregon's Death Penalty Problem Ms Shadow On 1963 By ZA STARK SALEM (UPI) The cyanide caprice associated with the Ore gon gas chamber is having its impact on the 1063 legislature, Sen. Don Willncr. D-PortlandJ has submitted an anti-death pen ally bill, and proposed that per sons sentenced to life be required to stay ill prison al least 15, years. Sen. Thomas Mahoney, D-Port- hmd, introduced a bill to make it harder to commute life or death sentences. Mahoncy's plan would require Supreme Court approval before a governor could grant a pardon or commutation. The Port land senator said lie wanted to make a life sentence mean some thing, and he wanted to lake pres sure off a governor. Some of the emotional fervor may have been dampened by the stay of Jeannaco June Freeman's J.'in. 29 date with death. ;"DENNIS THE MENACE" ' 'Take a carojAwcaroJ NOT THAT ONE l Hazing Practice Draws Scow From University EUGENE Urii-The office of President Arthur S. Flemming of the University of Oregon said Sun day th.it any fraternity at the school (ound guilty of hazing its pledges will be closed lor one year unless there were extenu ating circumstance. Any liatcrnily that has en gaged in haling activities in con nection Willi its initial inn cere monies lias violated a policy ol the University ol Oregon, the of lice said In a prrpaied policy Statement. . the ollice said that anv action Doors Open 6:45 TOM CliiiTlSiBIffllllilH NOW. ..ADD a "Olion ritiwm TO THE WONDtM OF TMI WOftlOl ..HATOlDHEDtT iHBUIEJ, MMitUTIUItCOlOl.rTA f NEWS, Klamath Falls, Ore. fT Fn Hi li iiiiimmi n-i '-'V- '-,-' v But Larry West Shipley, 21, oil McMinnviile is scheduled to en ter the gas chamber on Feb. 28. A plan to appeal Shipley's easel to the U.S. Supreme Court already has been announced by the Amen can Civil Liberties Union. It was Miss Freeman's second stay. An appeal for Shipley could result in a stay for him. There is a similarity in both the Freeman and Shipley cases. Miss Freeman's companion in crime and mother of two children killed, Mrs. Gertrude Nunez Jack son, was sentenced to lite u: prison. Shipley's companion in the slay ing of 16-year-old Linda Jean Stevens, Glen Douglas Dixon, was convicted of first degree murder and sentenced to life. Many legislators and officials! are on record in opposition to the taken would depend upon findings of an investigation the into hazing by Ponald DuSlmne. dean of students at Ihc university. The invetigntion began following meeting of the school's inteilia tcrnity council tribunal Thursday night to look into charges of haz ing against three fraternities. "There is no place on Ihc Uni versity of Oregon lanipus tor an group tli.it engages in hazing practices and thereby demon slrates its uller lack ol concern for the dignity, worth and well being of individuals." the state ment added. KUmalk tam. fir Pvtliiftttf atlv tcttt !! ) lufldif strvtfif (tuTrn onffwi r4 Ntflrxrn Clllfrni KlimfH Puftlifriiitf CtmBiny Mat at iiplantat TuiMa 4 lilt W. ft. i Pukhirrar ntiiM ai n4 (aii inatfar af ffc ait attt al Klamath Patii, Ontvn, n Awawit . ItM. vrtffar act 1 Carv rat, March J, ii'f. &wM-clati aet ata M' KlamHh ait. OrMA. nt) at Mtfitiaaat mailMf ffit. untmriioN raiii Carriar I Mal ItM Mft"it i ia 1 Ytar ill aa Mail in A4vara 1 Mawtd fin Aathi i at 1 Yaar i at Carrttr 4 Daalart Waabdar ft IvMav. tMf ttt UNHID lll I NT! NATIONAL AUDIT ftUftlAU OP CIRCULATION SvfcMMMri tMr HtriU i ITUrM 4-1111 fr t F M. Tuesday, January 22, 1961 r-fit i i J it. J Legislature death penalty. But the voters have disagreed. Gov. Mark Hatfield. Atty. Gen. Robert Y. Thornton, and Warden Clarence T. Gladden have openly opposed execution. In 1958 the people voted 276. W7 to 264,434 against abolishing the death penally a 12,000 vote mar gin. 'file voters did abolish the death penalty by a slim 157 votes in 1914. A scries of brutal murders followed, and in 1920 the death penally was reinstated by 17,- 000 voles. The hangman claimed 40 lives in Oregon before the gas chamber. was built in 1937. Since then 18 persons have lak en their last breath in the liny chamber at the state penitentiary -the latest on Aug. 20, 1962, when Lecroy Sanford McGahuey was executed lor the 1961 slaying of an infant. Former Gov. Rohcrt Holmes commuted three death sentences' and the gas chamber was unused for seven years prior to lie Gahuey's execution. The pattern seems the same. Preceding each scheduled execu tion there is a last-minute frantic scurry to appeal, to win a stay, to fight (or time, to hope for commutation. Kach pending execution sweeps tide of public reaction into the governors o.ticc. There are letters, personal visits, tearful pleas. Kach lime a stay is granted the tide recedes, only to come back again as the next execution date Hears. The Freeman and Shipley cases .innnt help but allcet legislative 'caelum. Bomb Range Price Eyed WASHINGTON UTI - Rep Robert Human. D-Orc., expressed confidence today thai problems met by Oregon in seeking the noardman bombing range could be solved. Duncan was the only member of the Oregon congressional dele gation to attend a meeting aimed M finding a solution. Sen. Wayne Morse was in New York to me diate in the waterfront stnke, and Hep. Al I'llni.in relumed to Ore gon because of the death of his lalher. However, all but Rep. Waller Nuihlad were represented by aides. Duncan said he would report on Ihc meeting to oilier members of Ihc Oregon delegation and ex IHvlcd them to hold another meet ing. Among topics discussd al to day's mceling was a letter from the Navy holding fast to Its ap praisal of the properly at $."8n, nun However, both Duncan and Wil liam Reig, Morse's administrative asMstant, said Ihc Navy had shown willingness to negotiate. Samuel Mallicoal. Oregon direc tor of planning and development, asked Hie congressional delega tion's aid in Irving to reduce the government's valuation for the land on which Ihc slate hopes to establish a space-age research and industrial center, with Booing Co. as a tenant. Duncan said he agreed with Morse that there did not appear to he any need for legislation and ili.il Ihc problems were negoti ah... Pickup & Delivery Coll Sparkle Car Wash 402J S. 6rh Ph. TU 4-SJ4J Surgeons Rejoin Severed Limbs-1 Operation Once Thought Impossible BOSTON (UPI i Twice within eight months two separate teams of surgeons have accomplished what once would have been called the impossible reioing severed limbs. The two cases involved ulti mately may prove to be unsuc cessful. But the very least these surgeons have proved is that re joining severed limbs for an ex. tended period ol tune, perhaps in definitely, is no longer an impos sibility. Their initial efforts someday may lead to a reduction in the number of persons who lose limbs because of accidents. Last May, Everett Knowles, 13, of Somerville, Mass., had his right arm completely severed by Aid Pledged To UN Plan For Congo WASHINGTON (UPI) - Presi dent Kennedy, hailing tlie end of Katanga's secession, Monday promised strong support of U.N plans to help make the Congo a strong and viable ledcrat na lion." Kennedy called on the Congolese! oublic to rally behind President Joseph hasavuDU ana rrime min ister Cyrille Adoula, who "face a tremendous challenge" in healing the wounds of two and a halt years of strife. Kennedy reaffirmed the U.S. policy of insuring Congo self-determination without political in stability. He pledged the "full support" of the United States to the United Nations in helping the Congo with "the great task of modernization. which is the most pressing goal of the leaders and people of that nation." 'The Congolese leaders face a tremendous challenge in healing the wounds of conflict, restoring a partially disrupted economy and building a strong and viable fed eral nation," Kennedy said. The end of secession. Kennedy said, was "warmly welcomed by the United States and all who are concerned with the future of the Congo and the whole of Africa." The United States' objective in the Congo is neither more nor less than the establishment of con ditions under which the Congolese people themselves can peacefully work out their own future," he said. IRS Limits Gift Giving WASHINGTON lUPD-The tax collector, who took Hie fun out of expense accounts, wants to take the influence from business gift giving. The International Revenue Serv ice warns businessmen that it they want to give tax-deductible gilts to a customer, a present worth Rj is the limit. Anything more is not deducti ble from their income tax. IRS, better known (or ils skep ticism than its naivcle, also wants information on what the gift giver expects to get out of the present; who's gelling it and what is his occupation, and a descrip tion of the gilt. The new series of lax deduction guidelines was published Sunday in an I ItS pamphlet titled rules lor deducting travel, entertainment and gift expenses. The lax man has not forgotten that a wav to a customer's heart may be through his family. Un der the l3 rules, the IRS speci fies that a gilt lo a client's wife Is the same as a gift to the client The rule also applies to his chil dren. The business partnerships also come under the IRS regulation. They are considered a unit, and only one S3 gift per partnership to a customer is allowed. CARPET SALE Now in Progress.' For example: CANDY STRIPE ALL NYLON Sale Priced! Now Only Many other rolls reduced! Shop Compare LUCAS FURNITURE 19S E. Main train. Last week, William Hunt, 37, a husky ex-Marine, had his left leg 90 per cent severed about half-way up his thigh in an auto mobile accident. Today, both the youngster and the man have these limbs still attached, to their bodies though the final results may not be known for many months. More Difficult The Knowics surgery, done at Massachusetts General Hospital where a team of surgeons were waiting for just such a case, prob ably was the more difficult of the two. The boy also probably has a poorer chance of regaining partial or full use of the limb. Everett s arm was severed just below the shoulder and the bone broken in half. The doctors' first jutui'cd arteries and veins, then rejoined the bones with a steel rod and finally sewed the arm back into place. The boy, a Little League pitcher until his accident, still must un dergo additional operations yet to be scheduled. These will involve the rejoining of nerves, perhaps the most difficult surgery of all- Without the nerves, the arm would be virtually useless, though there was a pulse and the limb was warm. Should this surgery fail. Everett might eventually lose the arm Doctors are hopeful this wul not be necessary. Different Technique In the Hunt case, the limb in volved, the leg of a 200-pound, 6-foot male, required a substan tially different technique. Instead of suturing the arteries and veins first, the Peter Ben Brigham Hospital doctors decided ELIZABETH HEUSTON Funeral Set On Jan. 23 Funeral services for Elizabeth McQuiston Heuston, 35. who died unexpectedly Jan. 19. will be at 2 p.m. Wednesday. Jan. 23, Irom O'Hair's Memorial Chapel. Cre mation will follow with the re mains to be sent lo Forest Lawn Memorial Park. Glcndalc. Calif. Rev. Robert L. Greene, St. Paul's Lpiscopal Church, will officiate. Mrs. Heuston. a denial nurse for Dr. Fred R. Krauei. died about 4 p.m. at the top of the stairs in Klamath Valley Hospital wlicre she had gone lo visit a friend. Death apparently followed a heart attack. She had lived in Klamath Coun- ty for several years, the daugh ter of Mr. and Mis. A. F. Mc Quiston. onetime owners of the I) & M Ranch at Fort Klamath She attended high school in Chilo quin. attended Southern Oregon College and gradualcd from San Diego State College in San Iran- CISCO. She was a memher of SI. Paul's Episcopal Church and of Cascade Chapter Order of the Eastern Star in Chiloquin. Survivors include the widower. Roland Heuston. Klamath Falls; parents. Mr and Mrs. A. F. Mc Quiston. I-ong Reach, Calif.; brother. Fred McOuislon, Santa Monica. Calif., and a sister, Joan McQuislon. Long Reach. Ht Your Owe MEDICARE IqttlUM i Mi)ttr Mittlrtl PU John H. Houston rtt ftinr-t ! Ph. 4-3134 $95 the limb had to be stabilized lirst. They operated in relays, first joining the bone, then the vascu lar system and finally the muscle tissue. A major difference between the two operations was in the nerve systems. The boy s nerves all were severed. The intact 10 per cent of Hunt's leg included the all-important sciatic nerve, Hunt now is able to wiggle his loes. Knowles has yet to move a finger because of the detached nerves. He does have some feeling in his arm. Free Press Supported By Briton NEW YORK (UPIl-Democra- cy is impossible without a free press, but the last decade has been a sad one for those who be lieve in press freedom, a British critic and journalist said today. Lara francis-WUIiams told the 10th anniversary convocation of the Fund for the Republic that "the existence or nonexistence of free press is one infallable touchstone of the claims of any society lo Be democratic. Francis-Williams, former cover nor of the British Broadcasting lo. ana editor ol the London Daily Herald, now writes a weekly col umn on press mailers. Address ing a session on "The Responsi bilities of the Mass Media." he said: Over almost the whole of Af rica this freedom is now in re treat. It has been emasculated or suppressed in almost every one ol tne new emergent nations brought to birth with such pangs ol democratic hope. In South Africa it has the noose around its neck. Nor except for India where newspapers, thank heaven, are both alive and kick ing, is the prospect in Asia much better. In Pakistan, Burma. Ma laya, Singapore, Thailand and In donesia the attributes of a free press are all denied in some de gree and in many in large de gree. So arc they in much of South America." Turning to some instances "countries of a more mature stale of life." he mentioned "the offi- ial attempts in your own country lo suppress, play down or plant news during tne Cuban crisis and the voice of Assistant Secretary Artnuri Sylvester from the Pen agon proclaiming the deliberate generation of news by govern ments to be' a legitimate part of the weaponry of the modern world ..." For Professional TREE SERVICE Baker's Nursery Coll TU 2-S5S3 Beck's Newest .. . "BUnERNUr I; "Fresh as Butter Sweet as a Nut" It's a brand new process ... a spun loaf. You'll find a finer textured loaf that stays fresh longer; with a truly new, richer flavor!Try "Butter Nut" from Beck's . . . it's bread with a delicious new flavor your whole family will enjoy! LOOK FOR THE BRIGHT NEW YELLOW WRAPPER ON YOUR GROCER'S SHELVES! Try all the fine products from BE r! i e Ac ay ue n r a vc WvLiLJ wr Vlnlin lM I J "Ml III I cl 0)1 IlltJ UUII bUIIDWUWH I'" wown w play at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Chalmers, 1304 Worden Street. The L: J. II. I AAA x- IAIO lL. I I.J . t -rvvr7 ki J In IfifQ uisqus aoiii are irom ituu i . , A . Ihe windows at the Chalmers home are used tor displays at an Times, me puonc is invited to view them. The wooden horse end stage coach are hand carved. NEWS ANALYSIS Fanfani Returns Home To Face Another Test Foreign News Commentary By PHIL N'EWSOM L'I'I Foreign News Analyst Showing little outward sign of concern, bouncy Italian Premier Amintore Fanfani returned home from the United States this week to face another of the tests which regularly have plagued Italian governments since 1953. It was nothing particularly new for Fanfani who had his first crack at the job in 1954 and be came but one in a bewildering succession of Italian premiers. It also seemed that Fanfani would keep his job at least until after general elections which President Antonio Segni is expect ed to call for April or early May. Chief opponent in the test fac ing Fanfani this time was Com munist Palmiro Togliatli whose party of an estimated 1.5 million members had filed a motion of no-confidence against Fanfani's 10-month-old center - left govern ment. Needed Socialists If Ihc Communist cause were lo be helped il would come from dissident members of Pictro Nen- in s Jell - wing Socialists whose failure to vote in the Chamber of Deputies had helped keep Fan lani's government in ollice and who now were accusing Fanfani of betraying his promises. Overall it was a picture of the :cncral confusion among Italy's Excluiiv.I Fast! Polaroid Reprints 2 for 25c LEC'S CAMERA SHOP 836 Moin Ph. 2-3331 CK'S BAKERY a i ir J II ll..i:. to itio, Tne cnina-neaoou one i . . . I political parties which for 10 years has prevented cstab lisluncnt of a stable government. Fanfani's Christian Democrats, (he dominant party, arc split three ways, among left, center and right. The man who held them together, former Premier Alcide de Gasperi, has been dead for nine years. Smaller, right-wing parties do not trust them. Ten months ago. Fanfani formed his center -'left coalition which included Social Democrats and Republicans but depended for its existence upon a marriage of convenience with the Nenni So cialists who agreed to support measures favorable to their own platform and to abstain from the vote on others. Promised Kelorms In return, Fanfani promised to decentralize state admini; tration by creating 15 regional govern ments, to, press school and agri cultural reforms, to develop low cost housing and to build more hospitals and health centers, to act against tax dodgers and to press for nationalization of cer tain utilities, notably electricity. When the chips were down, the Christian Democrats refused to go through with the plans for region al government out of fear that the Nenni Socialists might rejoin the Communists to take control. LIQUORS Oprn . !! fl;IMI l :0l) VVrrktUya S:U0 la B:M Jock's Super Market Tulel.ke, Calif. mm - L. U. An nn uilmJ.ui Jt no .wji w iwiu. II Tl If Dolls Shown In Windows Interesting exhibits of old dolls' and other antiques have been on' display in windows of the Ray-, mond Chalmers home at 1304 Wor den. Mrs. Chalmers has many other interesting exhibits of in terest to the public and at some future time plans to open a doll museum, to repair dolls and give advice on dressing and other in formation. The cradle to the left of the picture was made of soft wood, fastened by square nails by her great-grandfather. The collection was begun as a hobby many years ago. The dolls have been on display at the South Bay Doll Club exhibit in the Shrine Auditorium in the Los An geles district. The family has been in Klamath Falls about a year. During February, there will be a patriotic window with Presi dents George Washington and Abraham Lincoln and a window of old valentines. Some insects live unscathed on insect-eating plants. Certain small mollis, for example, lay their eggs only on pitcher plants and the larvae feed on the plant tis sues. Passenger Car Tire Department CLOSEOUT All Tires Priced AT COST J. W. KERNS it c. AL. tii a jia-r uTnZiis