Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, June 10, 1963, Page 3, Image 3

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    Mayors Back JFK On
Race Equality Issue
HONnl.III.lt mon ti
-wUU wt i, nuMueni
ncuuuuy s pica lor support of a
grass-roots program to promote
racial equality won support today
A.l.C. LYNN McATEE
Top Airman
Selected
. A.l.C. Lynn F. McAtee. jet air
craft mechanic for the 408th Con
solidated Aircraft Maintenance
Squadron, has been selected King
sley Field Airman of the Month
for May, the information office of
the airfield has reported.
As recipient of the award. Air
man McAfee has received a $25
check and a three-day pass pre
sented by Col. Edwin J. Witzen
burfier, commanding officer of the
airfield.
1 In addition, the airman will be
a guest at a Kiwanrs Club lunch
eon and w ill receive an article of
wearing apparel from a local
men's clothing store.
A native of Bozeman. Mont.,
McAtee entered the Air Force in
1936 and came to Kingsley Field
in Mil from Japan. While sta
tioned in that country. Airman
McAlce met and married Chiyoko.
The couple has a 2-year-old
daughter and resides at lufis Melrose.
from delegates to the National
Conference of Mayors.
"Very reasonable," said Vice
Mayor Sam MasselL of Atlanta,
Ga.
In his most pointed statement
yet on the civil rights crisis, Ken
nedy told the 650 mayors and oth
er municipal officials Sunday that
even if proposed federal civil
rights legislation is enacted "the
nnal responsibility . . . will still
rest with you at the local level."
Outlines Program
The President outlined a five-
step local level program to guide
the "peaceful revolution" under
way by Negroes. He said every
local government should:
Establish a biracial human re
lations committee to identify com-:
munity tensions before they reach
the crisis stage.
Make certain its ordinances
are in accord with constitutional
law.
Follow non - discriminatory
practices in the employment and
promotion of its municipal work
ers. Enact equal opportunity ordi
nances to spell out the civil richts
of all who live in that community.
Undertake a special campaign
this summer to lessen unemploy
ment among the unskilled of both
races by reducing school dropouts.
6 Killed In
State Wrecks
By United Press International
At least six persons died in Ore
gon highway traffic accidents
over the weekend.
Ross Rogers, 82, Dayton, and
his wife. Josephine. 7S, were
killed Sunday in a two-car, head
on collision on the Hopewell La
fayette secondary road at Hope
well near McMinnville.
Marshall Pcloquin, 51. Portland,
died in a hospital Sunday of in
juries suffered Saturday night
when his car left a Multnomah
County road and hit a utility pole.
John Dykstra. 67, Portland, wasj
killed in a one-car accident on
U.S. Highway 30 near Arlington
Saturday.
Patrick Young. 20, Bend, lost
his life in Upper Shevlin Park
near Bend when a car struck a
group of trees.
Dee Shankles, 69. Portland, died
in a three-car collision in Port
land Saturday.
The body of Ben Schomberg. 72,
of Junction City was found Sun
day night in his auto at the junc
tion of U.S. Highway WW and
State Highway 36 just south of
Junction City.
HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls, Oregon
Monday, June 10, 1961
PAGE J
5'-
.V
4
thi of flowers and a dI
POPE'S TEMPORARY RESTING PLACE Wrea
aque of the
a PI
Madonna adorn the temporary tomb of Pope John XXIII in a crypt below St. Peter's
Basilica. The body will later be moved to its permanent resting place in the Cathedral
of St. John Lateran in Rome. The church on June 7 began nine days of funeral rites
in St. Peter's for Pops John amid calls for his sainthood.
FU Chief Advises Farmers
In Other Lands To Organize
WASHINGTON (UP1) - Thethat without -'rong organization
Solons Slate
Busy Week
WASHINGTON UPI House
leaders have scheduled a rela
tively busy week, with three siza
ble measures up for debate.
An appropriations measure
which carried $140 million for the1
operations of Congress lexcept
for the Senate itself), the Library
of Congress, the Government
Printing Office and the U.S. Cap
itol in the year starting July 1
will be considered Tuesday
On Wednesday the House will
take up a proposed $456 million
increase in the appropriations!
ceiling for the two-year-old Area
Redevelopment Administration.
Thursday the House was to
take up extension for one year ol
corporate income and excise tax
rates which would otherwise drop1
or expire at the end of this
month.
Other congressional news:
Detergents: House investigators
turned from industrial wastes to
household detergents in their in
quiry into water pollution. Among
the scheduled witnesses at today's
hearings before the House natural
resources subcommittee were rep
resentatives of the Soap and De
tergents Manufacturers Associa
tion, an organization representing
most firms in the field.
Taxes: The House Ways &
Means Committee is expected
within the next few days to turn
down President Kennedy's re
quest to tax income from stock
dividends at the same rate as
wages, rents or interest. Stock
holders now do not have to in
clude in their taxable income the
first $50 dollars a year in stock
dividends. Additional income from
dividends is taxed at a rate 4 per
cent lower than income from
wages, rents or interests.
president of the National Farmers
Union (NFU) today advised farm
ers in underdeveloped nations to
organize for self-defense in both
politics and marketing.
James Patton, NFU president,
said in a speech prepared for de
livery to the World Food Congress
Woman Drowns
In River Plunge
LYLE. Wash. (UPI'-Mrs. Mar-
garet West, 19. of Hillsboro, Ore..
fell over a 100-foot embankment
into the turbulent Big Klickitat
River Sunday and presumably
drowned.
Search for her body resumed to
day after fishermen with boats
and nets failed to recover it Sun
day. Deputy George Durant said
more than 200 cars converged on
the scene two miles north of here.
Durant said Mrs. West was
walking along the top of the em
bankment with her husband. Earl,
20. She lost her footing in the soft
shale and fell over the nearly
vertical cliff.
farmers I -ti advanced and de-
."! ,'itions would not get a
fair shar of the goods of life."
Patton said effective farm co
operatives were needed in under
developed countries because
co-ops might be "the only hope"
for lifting farm income in such
areas.
In countries where there is little
wealth to begin with, he said,
"the clamoring hands of those
with the strongest economic or
political muscle do the dividing
at the expense of those least able
to protect themselves ... the
farmers."
Patton also urged strong farm
er action to press for government
policies protecting farm income.
"Without regulation and plan
ning by consent of the farmers
themselves, the forces outside ag
riculture would buffet it like a
small ship on a stormy sea," the
American farm leader said.
In the farm economy, Patton
added, "the role of government
is to bring the balance and se
curity that the industry cannot
unilaterally provide for itself."
Midwest Storms Reek Death
By United Press International
Thunderstorms and tornadoes
left a trail of death and destruc
tion in the Midwest today.
Tornadoes touched down in
Michigan, Minnesota and North
Dakota Sunday. The twisters
struck three times in the area
around Grand Rapids, Mich., and
1.70 inches of rain fell there in
six hours ending this morning.
The tornado caused $100,000
damage at Belmont, Mich., five
n.ues north of Grand Rapids.
Lightning destroyed a service sta
tion and several persons were in
jured, two seriously.
A tornado also was sighted
near Cascade Twp., east of Grand
Rapids, and at Hudsonville, on
the southwest edge of town. Un
confirmed tornadoes were report
ed over Howard City and in
Michigan's Newaygo County.
Many Drownings
The drowning toll alone ran
into the dozens during the week
end. Two accidents in Wisconsin
took three drowning victims each.
Three men drowned in Lake Win
nebago Saturday night. A father
and his two children drowned in
the Wisconsin River near Spring
Breen.
Ten persons drowned in Ohio,
and the toll in Indiana was nine
water deaths.
A powerful wind shook an
American Airlines plane that was
landing in Chicago s O Hare
Field. A stewardess and two pas
sengers suffered bruises and were
treated at a hospital.
Thunderstorms lashed scattered
parts of New England Sunday on
the 10th anniversary of the Wor
cester tornado. That twister, in
1953, killed 94 persons, injured
140, and did about $75-million
damage.
Tcen-Ager Killed
A teen-ager was killed in a
liead on collision in Tyngsboro,
Mass., during a driving rain
storm. Minor flooding and wash
outs were reported in the same
western Massachusetts area.
Rainfall amounts for the 24:
hours ending late Sunday includ- j
ed Denver .90, Milwaukee .87,
AmariUo, Tex., .78: Boston .69,
Cleveland .66 and Detroit .56.
A severe thunderstorm hit
Cambridge, Ohio, which already
had floods from heavy rains last
week. Firemen went to tlie mu
nicipal park pond to pump out
some of the rain so the dam
would not break.
A tornado blew down a barn
and damaged the house on a farm
near Janesville, Iowa. A Jackson,
Mich., man was killed early Sun
day when he tried to move a
downed electrical wire carrying
4.000 volts.
Kat 8 meals a day luae 6-10-16 Ua
Bellghtlully dellcloua Bllm-MInt
i Jieips control nppwui
V SHMA Waken reducing aaier.
k jeaa'r mora enjoy-
Seventy Soarer
MOUL1NS, France IUP1 A
77-ycar-old former test pilot Sat
urday logged his 400th hour of
soaring in a sail plane. Ludovic
Trotton, who took up the sport
at the age of 62, said lie tried
tu be a pilot in World War I but
he was declared physically unfit.
ENROLL NOW!!
For Summer
Danc Clanei
NORMADEAN
DANCE STUDIO
211 East Main
Phone TU H-AMW or TU 4-3101
FLOWER PLANTS
Large Variety
ALWAYS
LOW PRICE
207 E. Main
Ask obaut daily
"Business Card"
SPOT ADS
TU 4-lJM
Now at Miller's!
3i '.. .'.I
Waitress
Skirts
Black Nylon
Straight It f loir
Situ I to H
5.98
Also in stock o
complete telection of
UNIFORMS by:
Bob Evoni
0 Borco
0 White Swon
Tiffeny
All Waitnu Airani
nd llti in our Notient Ot.
iwm
V,
mm.
1
GOODYEAR
The Most
Beautiful
Coffee Table
NO MONEY
DOWN With
Trade,
Payments Low
as $3.50 Week
you've ever heard
THE WELLINGTON
The New Look of Stereo
The distinctive styling of this console
combines the elegance of fine furniture
with the superb reproduction of General
Electric stereophonic sound.
The unique General Electric
SWINGAWAY turntable
swivels out for easy record
handling without disturbing
anything on top , . . giving you
full-time use of the coffee table.
Come in soon and see the all
new Wellington!
THE WELLINGTON FEATURES:
iWINOtWHY TUNT.llt WITH GARRAM0 4 lEI0 CHANSIS
. . . puyi ttlrto ! menmral raeardt
arxrMi fLtcTic mm cimmig stihio castdidoi with
DIAMOND STYLUS
H0MC MUSIC 0ISTKISUTI0H SYSTEM (Optianal)
MUlTI DISICTIONAl SIX SPEAKER SYSTEM
mooch . . Earir Amttican mih,
Oamtn Moaani walnut
All WOOD CABINETRY
AMEMPM STERtO TUNES
AMPLE RECORD ST0RACI
$284.00
GOODYEAR
SERVICE STORE
201 South 11th
TU 4-8141
WinTool
Join Oregon Food's SUPERMARKET SWEEPSTAKES
Snomoid Extra Fancy
Delicious
APPLES
39'
3-Lb
Plio
Bag
Sunkisr Fancy
LEMONS
Cooling, Nippy, Refreshing
15
c
lb.
Favorite for Hot Weather
CUCUMBERS
Solid, Firm
Each
5
Advertised Items in
Last Thursday's Ad
Are Effective Through
WEDNESDAY
NIGHT
(with the exception of
meats and produce)
Boiling
BEEF
Plate and Brisker
95.1
Pure
Ground
BEEF
Ground Fresh Daily
4.
PORK
Sausage
Country Style
33ib
Reynolds Economy Banquet White King Beauty
Aluminum Foil Frozen Dinners Chunk Tuna Quick Starch
. 89 I E..h49 1 397 .5-o.. 59'
Zee Soola Safflower Swanson'i Wyandotte Large
Toilet Tissue Margarine Frozen Dinners rated (tores;
4Pak 43 Lb. 45C Each 65 5'Oz. Tin 37
Chun King Canned Chinese
CHICKEN CHOW
MEIN DINNER
77
Swift's
Vienna Sausage
49'
If You're Not Shopping Here
You're Spending Too Much!
We Reserve The Right To Limit
4480 South 6th 1315 Oregon Ave.
Avalon and Shasta Way
24-0. Tins
Libby's
Corned Beef
59
A1M14HB
12-0. Tin
ft- V
( ? U U U A lUirJdA
Prices Effective Through Wednesday Night While Quantities Last Store Hours 9:00 o.m.-9:00 p.m.