- - , .-'nrrU
U . . c oi"'"-'
Cairdirak Fail T ilec
Mew
Pom After h
u
Weather
Klimim Filli, Tultlakf and Laktvliw
Partly cloudy and mild through Fri
day with iiolattd tfttrnoofl and tvtnlng
thundershowari. Lowi tonight 0-44. High
Friday to-u. Wastarly winds S-lJ m.B.h.
nd gusty naar ihundmhowers.
High yestarday 11
Low this morning 44
High year ago , I)
Low yotr ago SI
Prtcfp. past 34 hours .00
Since Jan. 1 S.SI
Stmt period Uit year l.n
Iterate mu leto-
Weather
AGRICULTURAL FORf CAST
eighty per cent sunihlni and continued
werm Friday. High humidity will pro
duce haavy dew again tonight. Soil tem
perature 43 at eight inciwi. evaporation
near normal at .40 next 14 hours. Hay
ing outlook good with showers alftcttng
only small areas.
Price Ten Cents M Pages
KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, THURSDAY, JUNE 20, 1963 s
Telephone TU 4-8111 No. 7173
omman
dos El
In The-
Day's Jfens
By FRANK JENKINS
Russia's cosmonauts land safe
ly the gentleman on his 82nd
orbit of the earlh and the lady
on ner 49tn. They stayed up lone
er than all the rest of the world's
astronauts put together. Appar
ently they parachuted out of their
space vehicles and came down
safely on land
The only mishap seems to have
been a bruised nose on the lady's
pan.
These Russians!
Meaning, of course, the com
mon, everyday Russians and NOT
their communist overlords. They
work hard, they seem to have
good minds and, so far as
Known, they pay their way as
they go and put nothing on the
cuff.
It might -be just as well for us
to keep an intelligently observant
eye on them. Their communist
system, of course, is too bun
glesome and TOP-HEAVY to wor
ry us much. But, in lime, they
might have the simple common
sense to revolt and overthrow it
and adopt the free enterprise way
of life.
If they should
well, in that event, keep an
eye on them.
Poor old Britain.
She's getting her lumps.
As if she didn't have troubles
enough already. Prince Charlie,
the 14-year-old heir to the British
throne, faces a possible CAN
ING because he nipped a cherry
brandy in a Scottish pub.
It happend like this:
Cordonstoun, the strict and cor
rect English school that Prince
Charles attends, sent its private
yacht, the Pinta, on a short cruise
that included the Outer Hebrides
Islands, which are Scottish.
The Pinta stopped at the island
town of Stornaway, and the
Prince and three companions wept
ashore, with the school body
guard, to have dinner. The Prince
eluded the stern-eyed bodyguard
and went into the bar where he
took a seat and ordered, and
was served, a cherry brandy. At
that awkward moment the body-1 .j,,,,, from sul.n East Coast
guard entered the bar and readipoints a5 Ncw Yoi.k aiKi West
to Prince Charlie what the re- Coast cmes uke San Francisco,
porters describe as "a very re-PrC5ent as0 were rcpresenta-
etrainod not act lor neus 10
the British throne are not sup
posed to do things like that.
The Prince pushed away from
the bar and left for a steak and
potatoes dinner in the hotel din-
in; room.
loth i?
eported Landing For War Sn C
Pentagon Claims
No Confirmation
WASHINGTON (L'PI) The
State Department said today
that a check has produced "no
confirmation" of reports that
commandos of the Cuban Revo
lutipnary Council have landed
in Cuba In war of liberation.
The Pentagon also had no
knowledge of the landings.
State Department press offi
cer Richard I. Phillips said the
department had checked with
Its office in Miami, where the
reports originated, and It pro
duced nothing to support them.
MIAMI U'PD- Commandos of
have landed "at various points"
In Cuba to carry out "an effec
tive war" against the Castro re
gime, the council announced here
today.
The announcement did not say
how many men landed or whether
they arrived by plane or boat.
The date of their landing also was
not specilied.
But the council said:
"The first reports received by
radio from our forces state that
the landings were carried out
without difficulty and had the co-
people in the
the Cuban Revolutionary Council opeia.!10n of a"
The
NEW SUBSTATION DEDICATED A new power trans
mission line of the Pacific Power and Light Company,
providing an electrical link between the Rocky Mountain
Power Pool and the Pacific Northwest Power Pool, was
dedicated Tuesday at Rock Springs, Wyo. Here, Gov.
Clifford P. Hansen of Wyoming, left, receives instruc
tions on how to throw the switch from Russ Leever, chief
engineer for the Wyoming Division of PPL and a former
resident of Klamath Falls for 38 years.
Former KF Residents
Aid PPL Dedication
By FLOYD L. WYNNE i in Klamath Falls and began woik
f:.5i met West amid the rockv ing here with Copco, forerunner
plains of Wvoming Tuesdav andf the PPL group.
Klamath Falls held the center of1 Gov. Clifford P. Hansen of
the stage for a time. .Wyoming pushed the switch that
tion of a 2.10.000 kilowatt power
substation just outside the Wyo
ming town of Rock Springs. The
facility of the Pacific Power and
Light Company represents a sig
nlicant link in the industrial de
velopment of the state of Wyo
ming.
Dedication services climaxed
a four-day tour of the state of
Wyoming by a group of newspa
per, television ana ranio ropie-
ty, hailing it as an important step
(Continued on Page 4-A
Research
To Start
In Forests
SALEM iUPH - Hcyden New
port Chemical Corp. will begin
an 18-month research project in
mid-July in the Deschutes, Wi-
nema and Fremont national for
ests, Gov. Mark Hatfield an
nounced today.
The corporation bought 2-mil-
lion tons of pine stumps from the
U.S. Forest Service earlier this
year. The research and market
announcement
council
added:
"These commandos are ade
quately armed. They have pene
trated Cuban territory.
"Tomorrow, at 1 p.m. EST. the
military command of this force
will make a broadcast on the 40
meter band on 7018 kilocycles re
porting to Cuban exiles.
"The council announces that the
war of liberation has begun and
that its forces are prepared to
carry the fight to the enemy."
The announcement was termed
"war communique' number one."
It was signed by Jose Fernandez
Badue. council member and com
missioner of the information de
partment.
Premier Fidel Castro.
speech Tuesday, said
counter-revolutionary bands have
.
'th
''s:z6l S'fl"
No Candidate Receives
Two-Thirds Majority
VATICAN CITY (UPI) The
Sacred College of Cardinals failed
to elect a successor to Pope John
XXIII Lliis morning in titeir se
cret conclave.
A stream of black smoko from
a chimney atop the Sistine
Chapel, followed by an announce
ment by Vatican radio, told the
world that no candidate had re
ceived the required two-thirds ma
jority of the 80 cardinals partici
pating in the election.
Vatican radio said the two'
morning ballots were unsuccess
ful. Another round of voting was
scheduled for the afternoon. Tra
ditionally the cardinals vote four
times a day until a candidate re
ceives the necessary majority and
is proclaimed the now leader of
the Roman Catholic Church.
The BO princes of the church i
the largest group ever to partici
pate in a papal election were
called to mass at 12:56 a.m. PDT
prior to the voting.
Although in theory any Roman
Catholic man of reasonable age
can be elected, tradition of the
last four centuries pointed to an
Italian cardinal getting the nod.
Informed speculation favored
BLACK SMOKE RISES After four ballot., the Cardinals
of the Roman Catholic Church have failed to elect a new
pope. Black smoke shown coming from the chimney of
the Sistine Chapel in Vatican City indicates no cardinal
received the necessary two-thirds approval as a replace
ment to the late Pope John XXIII.
UPI Telophoto
Fight Looms
Over Civil
Rights Plan
Giovanni Battista Cardinal Mon
tini, 63, the archbishop of Milan
who is a leader of the "liberal"
faction of Hie sacred college
Montini was a close friend of
Pope John and supported the late
pontiff's revolutionary moves for
church reform and Christian
unity.
The balloting frequently devi
ates from advance predictions,
however, and any one of a dozen
other likely candidates could re
ceive the honor.
One of the first tasks of the
new pope will be to decide wheth
er to carry on w ith the Ecumen
ical Council called by Pope John
to promote his aims. The council
was suspended automatically
when John died June 3.
The conclave area was scaled
oft Wednesday night after the
cardinals entered following a
mass in SI. Peter's in which in
spiration was asked of (lie Holy
Ghost.
The two empty thrones in Hie
Sistine Chapel were for Jojsef
Cardinal Mindszenty, 71, the Hun
garian primate who has been in
the U.S. Legation in Budapest
since tlie Hungarian revolt was
crushed in 1956, and Carlos Ma
ria Cardinal de la Torre, of Qui
to. Ecuador, who is ill.
In addition to Cardinal Montini,
the other leading candidates are:
Gregory Peter Cardinal Aga-
gianian, 67, the Armenian who
heads the church's missionary
services; Giacomo Cardinal Ler-
caro, 71, the archbishop of Bo
logna; Ernesto Cardinal Ruflim,
75, archbishop of Palermo; Gio
vanna Cardinal Urbani, 63, pa
triarch of Venice, and Carlo Car
dinal Confalonicre, 69, a curia
application development activity i. , " ,"''", ' . . (USUI and various lumber
will cost about $500,000. 1, ," " "
Matanzas Province. There w as no
"In conference with Harold E.indicaljon Hnelher Mes!cli
ww, iuiiiiii .in- pi mucin ii bands were alfiliated with th
Hcyden Newport. I am convincedjM,am Revolutionary Council.
Hope Seen Following
Lumber Strike Meet
I PORTLAND UPI Explora-llalks with Georgia Pacific Corp.
. i . ul"'1 Hirelings uutwi'cii uio uuui-i tuiia.
oi-r onu Biiwiiiiii nuiini union i lc union met Wednesday wiui
lives Irom Oregon.
Klamath Falls occupied t h e
center of the stage by proxy.
Robert Gordon. Wyoming Divi
sion chief for PPL, handled the
dedication
tion and
Gordon
Falls resi
7T - A
r1 v ' r?f
in services at the substa-
d later at a luncheon. . ' ' '
is a former Klamath A
sident, and was a Copco. ' v. -
TV
H
What's to be done about it?
Well, the school's headma.-tcr. official here.
who arrived from the yacht about Russ Loever. tnief engineer for
that lime, says the Gordonstoun PPL's Wyoming division, ex-
I plained the workings of the new
(Continued on Page 4-A) Isub-station. Leever spent 38 years
rj
i
I A . Tf H
I IT . - - -
NONA KATHRYN BREED
Contestant
Good Artist
of the scientific approach the cor
poration is taking toward the com
plete utilization of the stump,"
Hatfield said. Crews will extract
samples to run pilot programs in
the laboratories. "Thorough re
search and analysis will be made
before full scale operations are
undertaken," the governor said.
The contract with the Forest
Service calls for Heyden Newport
to begin building a plant by the
end of 19K6.
"If the research proves satis
factory this project can mean a
significant breakthrough in the
economy of Oregon," Hatfield
said.
"We are fortunate that prelim
inary steps arc being taken to
assure a solid base for productiv
ity rather than proceeding with
out sufficient data and evidence.
We welcome the corporation's
The council, which recently
split with the Kennedy admin
istration due to its crackdown on
anti-Castro raider groups and ap
parent lack of a detailed policy to
free Cuba from Communist con
trol, w as the overt sponsor of the
ill-laled, American-conceived Pigs
Bay invasion of April 17, 11.
The president of the council, I
Antonio Maceo, could not be
irms Simnson Timber Co. A statement
continued here today alter an an-aier called it a "brief e.xplora
nouncement that the union KiH tocY meeting" and said further
by
; . "V f '
reached immediately. vrf t
But informed sources said the t ' )f j' 4 J
landings were carried out from a 25$,' , 4
boat before dawn today. Theyjl Jjtf .. jt ""tsa 'J
said the basic objective of the fr i
.'it:.
debarkation was to "reinforce"
rebels in Cuba.
"A large quantity of arms was
put ashore and many of the men
are experts in guerrilla warfare,"
one source said.
The expeditionary force came
presence in Oregon." the governor I'"" Point in the Caribbean,"
galo J I the source said.
By RL'TII KING
Beauty of a landscape,
4-H Club Spring Fair
Opens Three-Day Run
Ml,'
' 1 ...
f i
it
1
floating, ocean spray against the
rocks, and the shadow of a fern
leaf on tlie waters of a brook, are
caught with crayon and brush by
blonde Nona Kathryn Breed, 16.
who also aspires to be queen of
the I'M Klamath Falls Roundup
Nona, with changeable
gray eyes and "music in h e r
make-up," will ride Stockings, 13-year-old
sorrel mare in competi
tion for the senior rodeo crown
for tlie queen tryouts at the fair
crounds Sunday altcrnoon, June
a.
She is the daugmer of Mr. and
Mrs. Herbert S. Breed, is a high
K'liool senior, plays in the per
cussion section of the Klamath
I'nion High ScIhxiI Band, clips a
"mean runner" on smooth ice,
By RL'TII KING
Reporters who jugele words
are always on tlie lookout for
fresh new ones and what better
Klamath County Fairgrounds with others. Mrs. John Hooper and way to fine one than to inter
view a lass whose anceMors were
The annual 4-H Club Spring Fair I Drew; knitting. Mrs. Lewis Fur-
clouds opened Thursday morning at the ber and Mrs. Jack Brandon; all
JEAN McNAIR
Ranch Girl
Seeks Crown
exhibits in all home economies' Mrs. James Hopkins; clerks (or
projects, crafts, photography, elec
tricity, entomology and forestry.
Home economic members will
take part in contests, demonstra
tions and judging events during
blue llirce-iay lair which win Close
aaiuioay nigni wnn a sijk; re
vue. Theme of this year's fair is
"Once L'pon a Time." Bev Bower
and Francis Skinner, county
judges are Mrs. Warren Wood,
Mrs. Dale Moore. Mrs. Russell
Smith and Mrs. Eldon Kent
In charge of the various cloth
ing contests: Mrs. Wilmer Mc
Kune, Mrs. Donald McGhchey,
Mrs. Taylor Hih, Mrs. Floyd Ew
ing, Mrs. Jack Hayes and Mrs.
Don Manning. Style Revue Com
mittee iiKludcs Mrs. Robert
Pavne. Mrs. Jim Hackasson. Mrs.
home extension agents, are inlllalbert Wilson and Mrs. William
charge.
A talent
at
ginning
K'inz.
Responsible lor foods contests:
Mrs. Hugh Whipple. Mrs. Wayne
FUTURE 4-H CLUB MEMBER? Barbara Breaieale, al.
moit 2 years old, wondered about all th fust out at the
Klamath County Fairgrounds when preparations wera
made for opening of h annual 4-H Club Spring Fair
Thursday. Barbara it tha daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Rob
ert Breaieale. Routt I, Box 9260. Piggy banks war
made by John Atchlay, Spragua Rivar, from discarded
plastic bottles used for bleach, ammonia and other liquids.
.how on Friday, be
7 30 pm. will fea
ture 4-H'ers from the various clubs Yancey, Mrs. Porter Willis and
in the county. Saturday at 7:30!Mrs. Arthur Rice. Mrs. Ralph
p m over fiO members of clothing Stearns Jr. and Mrs. iJorothy Fair
and knitting projects will model' field will chairman the various
roller skates as well, is taking ,he annua M) Rcvu(, A n.mJ ,:n()or tiw nlrtlon ( Mr, ti,,b.!
j lourth-year Spanish. !are 0)en (n ,he Mic frfe o( ort Kennedy and Mrs. Harold
Rlondc Nona not only r i d e s I charge. JCamphell, rm-mbers ol the Hon-
jlwses. 'she has three in 4-H. a. pour-H leaders volunteering toilry Bakers 7 Kocxis Club decorated
Thoroughbred filly and twoiwrve a, commitlee chairmen for for the fair. In charge of demon
Arabians, a mare and f illy shevar,0Uj falr ,ri,Viiies inclu'le gen-! stratinns are Mrs. Victor Hartcll,
keeps records on the 4 H projecu 1 chairmen. Mrs. William1 Mrs Bob Williams and Mrs. Roh-
rcsume meetings with the 196- sessions arc subject to call
member Timber Operators Coun- either side.
cil Monday. "wc feci that the meeting was
Tlie I.SW was to hold wage useful and that progress was
made, commented J. w. farm
er, Simpson labor relations ad
ministrator. He said the talks
covered several points in addition
to wages, but would not elabor
ate. Olficials of the other large
Northwest lumber union, the In
ternational Woodworkers of Amer
ica IIWA), sat in on the session.
The IWA met with Simpson last
week and has another session
scheduled Tuesday.
Talks between both unions and
representatives of the Timber Op
erators Council were discontinued
June 4. That organization repre
sents mills in the Douglas Fir
bell from Northern Calilornia to
southeastern Alaska,
Strikes hy the two unions
against St. Regis Paper Co. and
U S. Plywood Corp. and a retali
atory shutdown bv Wevei hacuser.
International Pa)er, Rayonier and
Crown Zellerbach have idled 19.
000 workers in Oregon and Wash
ington. There was no indication that
further talks are imminent be
tween those groups. A hearing
was scheduled today in Montana
on a temporary injunction pre
venting the LSW from striking St.
Regis subsidiary plants in Libhy
and Troy, Mont.
Most other firms in the North
west are continuing to work under
extensions of contracts which ex
pired June I.
here long before the Pilgrims set I
loot on this continent.
Jean MrNair, 15. rules a bay
marc named Py-waket, which
means in the Indian language.
"No-good-maro," but really, Jean
doesn't mean it, except perhaps
wlien Py-waket misses a trick in
barrel racing competition.
She will compete this year for
queen of the Klamath Rasin Jun
ior Rodeo on July 20-21 with a
ranch family backcrotind at Mo
doc Point where Iter parents. Mr
nd Mrs. A. I). MrNair Jr.. raise
horses.
Jean will be a sopliomore when
September comes al Chiloquin
High School
Reds Being
Replaced
WASHINGTON '1,'PI' - U. S
officials said today Uiat Cuban
armed forces apcar to have be
gun replacing Soviet combat
troops in encampments in Cuba
Tiie Russians have been build
ing new low-level anti-aircraft in
stallations in Cuba to supplement
SA2 surlace-to-air missiles which
she nwims in the ; olanng in Cuba last
chilly waters of Diamond Lake, isi August and which arc still there.
memlier of the 4-H VSranjilers. a Tlie Soviet units also have been
horse group, loves hoi'seback rid-lrcm i)inl! time f lh0 24 SA2 in
mg, baseball and bowling. i.MallalKins on the island, ap-
WASHINGTON (UPD Prcsl-I
dent Kennedy's tough new civil member
rights program touched, ott in
Congress today what promised to
be one of the bitterest legislative . .
.bullies in decades. HfiT I IflP
Not even the staunches! back- I IU I lalllW
crs o( tne presidents many-i
pronged approach to the boiling
race crisis believed Congress
would buy it anywhere near in
tact.
At first glance, some of the
proposals he sent the .House and
Senate Wednesday appeared like
ly to be passed after only per'
functory polishing. Others, includ
ing some of the key items, looked
if they would be chewed to
pieces.
As Congress dug in for the leg'
islative battle, the White House
announced that the President had
invited 30 Negro and white "civil
rights leaders" to meet with him
Saturday. Included were the Rev
Martin Luther King Jr., and Roy
Wilkins. head of the National As
sociation for Advancement of
Colored People (NAACP).
The Saturday session was seen
as an effort by Kennedy to urge
moderation on Integrations lead
ers while Congress considers his
legislation. In his message Wed
nesday the President urged the
Negro community to halt demon
strations that lead to violence.
Kennedy conferred at the White
House Wednesday with 250 lead
ing educators. He asked them to
set up a committee that would
work at the grass roots level to
provide better schooling without
racial barriers. Participants said
there seemed to be general
agreement to his request.
In Congress the initial reaction
to the President's proposals was
predictably strong. Southerners
and some conservatives accused
the President of Riving in tn mob
rule and pledged to fight his pro
gram with every means at their
disposal.
Southerners were so angry Uiey
threatened not only a tilibuster
but use of their long-held com
mittee chairmanships to bottle up
the rest of Kennedy's legislative
program.
Links U.S.
With Soviet
GENEVA UPI I Tha United
States and Russia signed an
agreement today for the establish
ment of a "hot uoe" communi
cations link between Washington
and Moscow to reduce the risk of
war by accidenL
The historic accord was signed
by U.S. Ambassador Charles
Stolle and Soviet Ambassador
Semyon K. Tsarapkin, their na
tions' chief representatives at the
17 nation disarmament con
ference. The arrangement calls for a
"hot line" teleprinter link mean
ing it will be open and operating
24 hours a day every day of the
week which will permit Presi
dent Kennedy and Soviet Premier
Nikrta Khrushchev to confer im
mediately at any time.
Sidle and Tsarapkin affixed
their signatures to the agreement
at tlie European headquarters of
Uie United Nations, climaxing
about two months of secret
American-Soviet negotiations.
It was the first concrete accom
plishment of tlie disarmament
conference, which has been par
alyzed since it began in March,
19H2, by sharply-opposed Western
and Communist aims.
The "hot line" will connect the
Kremlin with the Pentagon and
probably tlie White House by way
of Helsinki, Stockholm and
London.
Messages between Kennedy and
Khrusnchev w ill be simultaneous
ly translated and coded under
procedures worked out by techni
cal experts from both sides.
She is no novice at handling
livestock, helps haul feed by
true k. has a driver s permit and a
j There are seven hoys and girls
in her (amily which means that
' every boy and girl has a b to do
! and does jt
ert Swallord. Exhibit watchers forldog named Tony. Site is a mem
lier of Die Girls' Athletic Aoci-
Kunr. Mrs Dale Moore. Mr:
Ralph Stearns Jr.. and Mrs. Rus-1 the evening events are Mrs
ell Smi'h: exhibit chairmen: iCharlcs Burt and Mis Gray Bran
ckithing. Mrs. Hubert Vanderhof f ' noo.
I A sister, Wanda, is a candidate, and Mrs. W. F. Dean; foods. Mrs The talent show is rhairmanncd deep brown
I lor Junior Rodeo queen. Robert Caldwell and Mrs. Williamj by Alvm Clieyr. I dark hair.
Iiaienlly lor better protection of
key arras.
These lacts, gleaned from t S
viurcx?s. provide new bits in the
total picture of Soviet military
ation in high school, has three strength in Cuba which, though
sisters and three brothers, has j "thinned out," is still an integral
eyes, and short, j part of a formidable military cap
I ability time.
HOT LINE ACTIVATED Tha U.S. hat announced sign,
ing of a "hot-Una" accord with Moscow. This will acti
vate a Waihington-Moseow teletype link which will link
President Kennedy and Nilcita Knruthehav. Washington
hailed tha accord ai a stap toward preventing accidental
war. UPI Telephoto