Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, June 16, 1963, Page 5, Image 5

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    West Berliners Taunted
While Crossing To East
BERLIN it'PI' A handful
nf West Berliners drove unhin
dered through a Communist
checkpoint at a new opening in
the Berlin wall Saturday while
East German guards held up
traffic at older control points
A small crowd of about 30 West
Berliners booed and whistled at
the passengers in the first three
cars to go through the new Ru
dower Chausse crossing point on
their way to East Berlin's!
Schoenefeld Airport.
West Berlin police in a newly
built control post held up the lit
tle convoy for about 10 minutes
, while they checked the documents
of the passengers.
Dhe East Germans built the;
new crossing point and opened it
to publicize the start nf their
once-weekly direct flight from
East Berlin to Vienna.
They hope to capture some
Western travelers' dollars now
going to the three Western air
lines operating from West Berlin.
The West Berliners allowed
through the checkpoint were be
lieved to be travel agents Invited
lor the inaugural flight.
Heavy traffic for the holiday
weekend, coupled wilh Commu
nist go-slow tactics, created
line of molorists as much as 1,200
cars long, stretciiing from Ba
belsberg three miles back, tu the!
borders of West Berlin.
West Berliners were driving to
West Germany in large numbers!
to take advantage of the long
weenenu. .Monday is a hohdav
commemorating the June 17.
1!'33, uprising in Enst Germany
West Berlin police figures pub-
nsnivi looav showed that 54 per
sons were killed while attempting
to tlee over the Communist wall
Ic West Berlin between Ann. 13.
1961. and June 10 this vear.
Police said thev believed the
ertual total was much higher but
only the deaths actually wit
nessed from W est Berlin were I
counted.
The new crossing point opened
Saturday makes a total of three
from West Berlin into East Ger-I
many hid seven from West to
East Berlin. It is the first new
passageway opened since the
wall was put up in August, 1961.
tmmmmAK MS 4
DATE: -HEIGHT:
TRIP:
SPEED-'
ORBITS:
SHIP:
WEIGHT:
(Ibi.)
POPOVICH
8-12-62
157mi.
1.2 million
17,500
48
VOSTOK-4
NIKOL ATEV SCHIRRA
8-11-62 10-3-62
156mi. 176mi.
COOPER '
5-15-63
165 mi.
575,000
1.6million 160,000
17.500 17, 560 mph. 17,544
64 6 22.9
VOSTOK-3 SIGMA-7 FAITH-7
UNKNOWN UNKNOWN 3,000 2,400
RECENT SPACE FLIGHTS
BYKOVSKY
6-14-63
o
VOSTOK-5
WOMAN
COSMONAUT
Rtndtzvous
vrftft
BYKOVSKY
VOSTOK-6
Civilians Take Military View On Space
Lakeview
Man Dies
Former City
Man Dies
Funeral services for Clarence
M. Mattsen of Yreka, Calif., who
died Thursday, will be held at 2
p.m. Monday at Merrill Presby
terian Church. The Rev. Wayne
Wattman will officiate. Interment
will be in Merrill Cemetery.
Mr. Mattsen was born May 19,
Rarry J. Anthony. IB. promi-j 1909- in pine ci'y, Minn. He was
nent Lakeview resident died Fri
day at the Lakeview Hospital
where -he had been confined fol
lowing a heart attack.
Recitation of the Rosary will
be held Monday night at 8 o'clock
at the Ousley Osterman Chapel
and Requiem Mass will be of
fered at St. Patrick's Catholic
Church at 10 a.m. Tuesday. June
18, with interment to follow at
Sunset Park Cemetery Father
Michael Reilly, OSB, of Ml. An
gel will officiate.
He was born Nov. 9, 1H87 at
Tarvert, County Kerry. Ireland,
and came to Lake County in 1904.
On April 21. 1934 he was mar
ried to Helen Minton in Lake
view. Surviving are his w ife, a daugh
ter, Mrs. Shirley Start; three
grandchildren, of Lakeview; three
sisters in Ireland, Molly and Em
ily Anthony, of Dungavan, Coun
ty Waterford. and Sister Mary
Aquinas, of Black Rock, County
Cork.
He was a veteran of World War
I and a charter member of Lake
view American Legion Post and
was a Lake County Service offi
cer. His father was in the banking
business in Ireland. Mr. Anthony
received schooling in the liberal
arts college at Maryborough, in
Queens County, Ireland. He came
In lake County and worked in
sheep camps and ranches and
then operaled the Warner Val
ley Mercantile Company store in
Plush. In 1909 he went to Ar
gentina and worked on a cattle
ranch and then returned to Lake
County in 1916. He spent most of
his Army service in France.
For a number of years he man
aged a store and was postmaster
at Paisley and then turned to
ranching.
In 194J the family moved to
I-akeview and he entered the tax
'accounting business. He spent two
years as town council member
and two years as mayor of Lake
view. He held the position of sec
retary of the Elks l-odge for 16
vears.
employed as a carpenter in con
struction work in the Klamath
Falls area for several years. For
the past two years he has made
his home in Yreka.
He was a veteran of World War
II serving with the United Stales
Air Force. He entered service in
1942 at Fort Snclling and was
discharged in 1945.
Feb. 22. 19.16. in Merrill, he
married Melba Pettcrson.
Survivors include his mother.
Mrs. Betsy Mattsen. Tulelake; his
daughter Mrs. Shirley Haggard.
San Bernardino. Calif. ; four broth
ers. John H. Mattsen, Malin. Iver
A. Mattsen. Bandon. Ore.; George
B. Mattsen, Merrill: Melvin E.
Mattsen. Pine City. Minn.; three
sisters. Mrs. Martha Barnes,
.Merrill, Mrs. Esther Johnson. Tu
lelake. Mrs. Lillian Chapman,
Merrill, and two grandchildren.
WASHINGTON' i UPI i-Skepti
cal civilian officials in the De
fense Department are coming
around to the military view
the future necessity of manned
military space craft, qualified
sources reported 'Saturday.
As one sign of the conversion,
they cited recent high-level sug
gestions that the Pentagon, rather
than the National Aeronautics and
Space Administration i.'.SA,
should have primary responsibil
ity for developing a manned or
bital space station.
military viewpoint, include a pres
ent prospect that Defense Secre
tary Robert S. McNamara will
continue the Dyna-Soar project
which calls for a manned orbital
space craft .vith wings that will
enable it to land conventionally
on earth bases. The Air Force, at
any rate, seems to feel optimistic
on Dyna-Soar's future.
Mansfield Set To Rush
Bills Through Senate
WASHINGTON lUPD Senate
Democratic Leader Mike Mans
field said today he wants to push
tli.-m.fih as munu aln-iitl iuf rut Inn
President Kennedy will decide . ms M jble Mon a civil
rights filibuster tics up Congress.
The Montana Democrat and
whether to go ahead with the
station and which agency to put
in charge of the project before
sending his new budget to Con
gress next January.
.The Pentagon view now seems
to be that the station, which
might cost $2 billion over several
years, should be a joint Defense
NASA venture but with the Penta
gon as top manager.
Other Signs
Other favorable signs, from the
other leader of both parties from
House and Senate will confer with
President Kennedy again Monday
morning on the administration's
civil rights program.
Mansfield said that at this con
ference, the second in less than
a week, he looks for the Presi
dent to outline his proposals in
"more detail." Whether all points
will be in their final form, how
ever, remained in some doubt.
The President's proposals may
go to Congress as early as Tues-dav.
Views Of The IWA
Trucks Given
Inspection
Orange Racer
Takes Trophy
Across the finish line sped a
bright orange racer and the Pine-
wood Derby Trophy of Cub Scout
Pack No. 101 and a chance toi
compete in the National races
ir. Chicago later this summer
belonged to Teddy Sharp, son of
Mr and Mrs. Fred Sharp, Mid
land.
Toddy's racer topped the bestiwage increase to their employes.
nut of the six cub and wcbeloSThesc figures were compiled by
The Democratic leader said ad
ministration experts are still
"looking into" the problem of
what course should be followed
in proposing legislation to assure
Negro access to public facilities
and accommodations, particularly
those like hotels and restaurants.
The question is whether to use
the 14th Amendment's guarantee
of equal rights for all citiicns or
to utilize the interstate commerce
clause as the justification for fed
eral enforcement of Negro access
to facilities and accommodations
now open only to whites.
Mansfield said the administra
tion, to the nest of his knowledge,
has not decided .which approach
to use.
Along with indications that Mc
Namara and his advisers are
shifting from earlier skepticism
on military space operations,
sources also reported an upswing
of interest in new types of
manned strategic air craft.
Wilh the end of B52 bomber
production and -McNamara's
sturdy opposition to the RS70 war
plane, it had seemed there would
be an almost total shift to ballis
tic missiles after this decade. Now
interest in strategic planes seems
to be alive again. Two types have
captured Defense Department Im
agination. Camel-l.ike Machine
One is the so-called Dromidary,
a camel-like machine that might
fly as long as a week and carry
a load ol bombs and missiles, i
The other is a "Low-Level
Penetrator" armed with missiles
and designed for supersonic
dashes over enemy territory be
neath the reach of radar warning
systems.
Either of these would take six
years to develop and the Air
Force would prefer to go ahead
now with the 2.000 m.p.h. RS70.
McNamara's opposition seems
lixed. however.
HKttAf.9 A VT Win, Rti
Jnnduy, June It, 1963
PAGE S-A
Prime Minister Macmillan Gains
Support In Hard Political Battle
LONDON (Ul'Ii Prime Minis-iebellion against .Macmillan and
ler Harold Macmillan Saturday I possibly force him out of office
won the support of Health Minister
Enoch Powell and thus made cer
tain of victory in the critical de
bate in the House of Commons
Monday on the security aspects
oi the Profumo scandal.
Powell had been reported for
days to be on the brink of resigna
tion, an act that political obser
vers said wopld spark a party
Obituaries
COZORT
John Clinti Coiort, tl, dld htrt June
IS. 1963. Survlvon: Wilt, Mamie, Warn
alh Falls; son. Rav. Sacramanto, Calif.;
daughttrt. Aleta Fraeman, Avon, Mass.,
Beatrice Whltson, Sacramento; step-
daughters, Helen Smlthers. Klamath
l-alls, and tana cook, rnoenm, ore..
also two grandchildren. Funeral services
will be announced bv Ward's Klamath
Funeral Home.
ANTHONY
Harry J. Anthony, 75, died Juna 1.
Survived bv wife, Helen; daughter, Mrs.
Shirley Start, three grandchildren,
all of Lakeview. Recitation ot the Holy
Rosary p.m. Monday, June 17, ousley
Osterman Chapel. Mass 10 a.m. Tuesday,
June 11, at St. Patrick's Catholic Church,
Lakeview.
or bring down the government.
Tlie health minister, who once
before resigned from a Macmil-1
Ian cabinet on a matter of prin
ciple, had hurried from this week's
emergency cabinet mectings,
grim-faced and refusing to com
ment. Thus it was a major politi
cal surprise late today when he
told his constituents at Norfolk:
"I am convinced that from the
beginning to the end of the Pro
fumo affuir and in every aspect
of it, the personal honor and in
tegrity of the prime minister are
absolutely unsullied.
"1 look to be in my place Mon
('ay to support him,"
With Powell safely in the Mac
millan camp, the prime minister's
jubilant supporters felt that only
h handful of back-bench Tories
if that many will dare vote
against him at the end of the
debate on his handling of the worst
political scandal in Britain in a
century.
A government party spokesman,
ir what amounted to a preview
of the prime minister's defense,
admitted today there was "a se
rious security risk from the very
first day in the fact resigned
War Minister John Profumo shar
ed the favors of parly girl Chris
tine Keeler with Capt. Eugene
Ivanov, a former Soviet naval at
tache.
Funerals
MOON
Funeral services tor Juanlla Lucille
Moon will be held Irom Ford Funeral
Home. Colfeyvllle, Kan., at a later date.
Ward's Klamath Funeral Home In charge
of arrangements.
MORACHI
Requiem Mass tor Joseph Roy Mor.
ache will be held from Sacred Heert
Catholic Church Monday, Juna 17, at 9:30
a.m. Recitation ol Hoty Rosary Ward's
Klamath Funeral Home Sunday, June
16, at I p m. Concluding services Klam
ath Memorial Park.
THOMPSON
Funeral services for Herman Nelson
"Jack" Thompson will be held Irom the
chapel of Ward's Klamath Funeral Home
Mondey, June 17, at I p m. Concluding
services Klamath Memorial Park.
WANTED!
Brand nw btauty shop will
hav openingt lor 2 operators
In ntar future. Apply at Your
Beauty Shop, 255 E. Moin.
School's
Out . . .
if
I'm JIM
!
' tiv V
! iiv.-j?S
I'm KIRK
It's vocation time.
Wo'ro going to
take the lummor
off. Wo'ro going
to livo it up, and
Dad's on his own.
Sa you naxt fall.
JIM CRISMON
First National Bank Bldg.
tui: 2-3454 Ron 4-46:8
Great-West Life
MIUMMt MMMKV
O-m
"Your Future il My Bulinca - Todoy"
(Continued from Page 3-A)
able to grant a substantial wage
increase, lei us look at the rec
ords of their earnings lor the
year in which they claimed that
they were unable to grant any
dens competing at Falcon Heights
School June 13. Twenty six hoys
entered their miniature five-ounce
lat-crs in the derby.
Second place winner was Glenn
Harder of Ixmi 4, son of T.Sgt.
SAI.EM lUPli Oregon joined land Mi s. Charles Harder. Falconi
with 39 other stales this month Heights, who was awarded a cer-
in a crack-down on illegal trans
portation of goods by truckers.
A series of check points were
set up in Oregon, and all trucks
were stopped and drivers ques
tioned about the origin and desti
nation of their load, the, weight,
and commodity.
The survey, which began June 8.
ended Saturday.
James E. Singleton, director of
transportation for the Oregon
Public Utility Commissioner, said
checkpoints were set up at Pleas
ant Hill near Eugene. Roseburg.
and Woodburn.
Similar checks were made si
multaneously in 39 other states.
The Interstate Commerce Com
mission will evaluate the informa-ilnn
tion and determine which truckers
were in violation of regulations.
tificale.
Gold and silver plaques for
first and second place in each
den were presented to Den 1;
Jasen Smith. Melvin Weather-
spoon; Den 2. Huss Simmons,
Scott Trnka: Den 3. Bobby La
Pierrc, Jose Gomez: Den 4. Glenn
Harder. Dale Wangcman; Den 6.
the IWA Research and Educa
tion Deoartmont from financial re
ports made public by these com- gociation
panics. Vte ask you: Are these
companies with profits figures
like Ihesc. sick financially?
In 1 Crown Zellerbach made
a net profit of $.16.7 million in
Unci !; 8 million Ihe first quar
ter of 13, ending on March 31,
$8.4 million. In 1961 International
Paper Company made a net prof
it of $72 million in I9fi2 $r7 mil
lion. Rayonier. Inc.. in I Ml made
a net profit of $8 million in 19112
its net profits were 11.4 million
dollars. In 19BI SI. Regis Paper
we wish to inform the public
that the IWA is not on strike
against Weyerhaeuser Company.
We have been laid off and are
ready to return to work at any
time Ihe company is willing to
call us back. The economic con
dition imposed upon this commu
nity must be borne solely by the
Weyerhaeuser Company and the
'Big Six" Lumber Producers A-
Larry Massev. David Stewart. andjCompany made a net profit of $17.3
wcbelos. Teddv Sharp. million in 12 its net profit was
Ollicial judrics lor the event! 2' 3 million. Now. let us look at
v-ere Erwin Brower. principal of 'he financial status of Weyer
Falcon Heights School. Col. Lu- haeuser Company. In 19HI Weycr
cous Thous. Kingsley Field comp- haeuser's net profit amounted to
troller. and Lee Allen, assistant $16 6 million-in 1962 its net prof
district commissioner nf scouting. j it amounted to $39 1 million. For
Other officials were T Sgt. How- the first quarter of 196.1 ending
ard Simmons. M Sut. Oscar Dil- on March 31. 1963. Weyerhaeuser
Crisis Grows
In Argentina
BUENOS AIRES iL'PD - A
trui t decision upholding the can
didacy of a presidential candi
date handpickcH by ex-dictator
Juan D. Peron brought Argentina
to the threshold of a new politi
cal crisis Saturday.
The ruling also declared ami
Peronist decrees unconstitutional.
The decision, which came just
three weeks before presidential
election, appeared certain tn an
tagonize Argentina's powerful mil
itary establishment, which is bit
terly anti-Peronist.
The military civilian provision
al government had soucht tn
have the candidacy of Vicente
Solano Lima nullified on the
grounds he was selected by Peron
and had stated he was willing to
permit Peron s return from exile
Criminal Court Judge Carlos
Aricns ruled that all anti-Pernnut
decrees are unconstitutional and
that Solano Lima could not be
barred as a candidate on Ihe
hasis of them.
Punta Arenas, at the extreme
end of Patagonia on the Straus of
Magellan, is the world's soulh-
rocistrars; T Set. Lyle W'an-
grman. SStt. Dean Marney.
starters, and T Sgt. Norman Pet
tcrson. x-orekeeper.
I.t Dick Joyce is Pack lot cub
master and A l l. George Kinne,
assistant cubmaster.
net profits amounted to $9 3 mil
lion.
Now. bear in mind that these
own fiiiures made public from
their financial reports. In view of
this we feel that our demands
arc reasonable and just. Again,
Shop
Today
' At Store No. 2
South 6th &
Shasta Way
OPEN TILL
MIDNIGHT
Monday Thru Sat.
All Grocery
Specials from
last Thurs.
ad good thru
Wednesday!
MARKET
BASKET
9th and Pino
So. 6th and Shoito Way
ararwTi5
5Mm
KEWSPAPEISVl
IZJUMU
UU3
MONDAY, June 17th
Whof a week! Family after fomily hoi been mopping up
these tremendous Frigidoire oppliance volues. Now there
ore just a few left. And timt't running out. Better hurry in
tomorrow!
Get This Useful Garden Cart
with purchase of any major
FRIGIDAIRE APPLIANCE!
All Metal Rubber Tires ' Big 3 Cu. Ft. Capacity!
FREE
Yern Owens'
Cascade Home Furnishings
412 Main
Ph. TU 4-8365
' ' '-'VJf -'T yS
A- . , r ' - " "
JACK THOMAS
We Challenge You
to find a BETTER CAR
DODGE IS FIRST!
1st in SALES 1st in STYLING 1st in COMFORT
ASK
Chuck
McHenery
ASK
Dave
Moran
OR
TO l-00
tJ
tm
RAY HUNT
TU 4-423S
OR
Mm
OR
TU 4-771
WAYNC KtEFER
IL -224
MAIN GARAGE
424 So. 6th TU 4-7716
SALES and
SERVICE
USED CAR LOT
7th & Commercial TU 4-4627