GKN.ssK.Aaa uoc'JasKrs civ. EUJi.W2,Oiti'J. In The- Day's lews By FRANK JENKINS In Frankfurt, Germany, today ,,"'" wiuieay tens a million entering Germans that the Unit ed States will RISK ITS CITIES, if necessary, to defend its allies. He added: "A threat to the free- own oi turope is a threat to uie Ireedom of America." He continued: "The Atlantic community is in divisible. Hundreds of thousand oi our soldiers serve with yours on mis continent as tangible ev oence of that pledge. Those who would doubt our pledge or deny this indivisibility those who would separate Europe from America ... or split one a 1 1 y from another . . . would only give aid and comfort to the men who make themselves our adversaries and welcome any Western disar ray." Question: Whom was he talking to? The answer is rather plain. He was talking to a gentleman named De Gaulle. Weallier Klamarh Falls, Tulalaka and Lakavlaw Partly cloudy rhrovor. WadMtday mgftt wtrh a raw Uiowart ovtr Hit mounlaini. Low tonight 4M3. Warmtr WodnaMay. High 14-71. Wattarly winds J-ll m.p.h. High yaitorday 71 Low tnit morninf 14 High yaar ago ao Low yaar ago si Prccip. pait 14 hours .00 Sinco Jan. 1 j.u Sama pariod last yaar l.ll Weather AGRICULTURAL FORECAST Eighty par tint tunihlnt Wdnidy wilh warmtr ttmpartlurM and lowtr humidity. Madtrat daw tonight. Haying and tpraying outlook fairly good naxt tew days with a little drying condition and Ihundar ihowtri dim inl thing. Price Ten Cents 14 Page KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON', TUESDAY, JUNE 25, 1963 Telephone TU 4-8111 No. 7177 Kangaroo Court' .Charge Leveled At JFK Would Risk Cities To Defend US Allies This may be taken for granted This strange gentleman named De Gaulle was undoubtedly listen ing very carefully indeed to w hat President Kennedy was saying in Frankfurt, the ancient capital of. Germany. He was watching and sizing up the MILLION cheering Germans who greeted President Kennedy as he arrived in Frankfurt to make the speech that was billed as the MAJOR address of his 12 day tour of West Germany, Ber lin, Ireland and Britain. He must have been saying to himself: "What will these Ger mans do? Will they stick with me, in my proposal of a Europe for Euroans? Or will they stick with the U.S.A? Let's put it this way: If the Germans stick with De Gaulle in a Europe for Europeans proposal, it will be time for us to pick up our toys and come home. That's about the size of the situation that is shaping up. On the lighter side: A dispatch from Bonn, in Ger many, tells us that "President Kennedy has flunked in Ameri can history. In a brief speech at Cologne, he told the German crowd gathered in the city hall square: "As a cilizen of Boston. wli:.-h TAKES PK1UE' IN BEING THE OLDEST city in the United States " As a mailer of history, the oldest city in the U.S. is St. Augustine, in Florida, which was founded in 13U5. Bos ton was founded in 1630. 65 years later. It was a bit embarrassing, of course. But let's not blame our President too much for his slip. The speech, of course, was writ ten by his speech writers. That brings up another story. A while back, in Washington, Oregon's Senator Maurine Neu ber'ger sent out to her ghost writ er lor a speech. It started off like this: "When I was a BOY, things were quite different in our country." The ghost writer didn't know that Oregon's junior senator is a woman. FRANKFURT, Germany fUPI President Kennedy dramatized his campaign for closer Atlantic unity today by promising that the United States would "risk its cities" if necessary to defend its Allies. "A threat to the freedom of Eu rope is a threat to the freedom of America," the President said in a speech at the historic Paul skirche St. Paul's Church ). While he emphasized defense matters, the Chief Executive also called for economic unity and common political purpose as req uisites to successful Western re sistance to Communist pen etration. The White House staff regarded Kennedy's prepared Paulskirche speech as the most important ut terance of his four-day visit to West Germany, the first stop on his 12-day European tour. Aimed At Critics The main thrust of the speech was aimed at international critics who have forecast that the United Slates ultimately will welsh on defense commitments to its West ern Allies and revert to what the President scorned as "narrow na tionalism." The President, who came here from two days of talks in Bonn with Chancellor Konrad Ade- , vowed that American de- Airmen Cleared WASHINGTON if PI '-The De fense Department today cleared three U.S. Air Force men who were flown home from Britain for Questioning in the Profumo sex and security scandals. The airmen were not identified. But the department said impli cation had shown that none was "involved directly or indirectly in any way, or had any knowledge concerning the case. Lumber Talks Break Down PORTLAND iUPI- Talks be tween the Lumber and Sawmill Workers Union 1LSW1 and the Timber Operators Council, which represents some 196 employers, resumed and then broke down again Monday. Spreading of the current strike appeared possible. The TOC offered the union a 20- cent hourly wage hike over the next three years. This was reject ed bv the union which reiterated its demand for a 60-cent an hour raise over the same period. A federal conciliator called a caucus lor eacn sine ana men talks were recessed. A union spokesman said he con sidered the talks at an impasse and added the negotiating com mittee "mav take selective eco nomic action" against one. two or three members of the TOC. In Kalispell, Mont., a temporary restraining order which had barred the LSW Irom sinning aaainst the St. Regis Paper Co. at Libby and Troy was vacated by Judge Frank Haswell. The LSW and the international Woodworkers of America MW.V earlier struck St. Regis and U.S. fense commitments to protect "common freedom and safety" were assured "by one great fun damental fact that they are deeply rooted in America's own self interest." "Our commitment to Europe is indispensable in our interest as well as yours," he said to a large Frankfurt audience and television viewers across Western Europe. "A threat to the freedom of Eu rope is a threat to the freedom of America." Reviews U.S. Troops Kennedy arrived in Frankfurt after conferring with West Berlin Mayor Willy Brandt in Bonn and visiting American troops near Hanau in his role as commander-in-chief. He flies to Berlin Wednesday. The building in which the Resort City Wins Demo Convention WASHINGTON IUPD - The Democrats agreed today to hold their 1964 national convention to renominate President Kennedy at the famous boardwalk resort of Atlantic City, N.J., beginning August 24. The convention will come just live weeks after the Republicans select their challenger in San Francisco. Barring some stunning political upheaval, the Democratic conven tion will be devoted largely to renominating Kennedy for a sec ond term and hammering out e party platform. Atlantic City which never has had a national political conven tionwas selected by the Demo cratic Party's Sites Committee at a special breakfast session. The recommendation was quickly ap proved bv the Democratic Na tional Committee without audible dissent. The New Jersey city, famed for its weather-worn boardwalks, salt water air and rolling chairs, won out oxer Miami Beach and Chi cago in the final balloting. Cliica20 was ruled out at the lasl minute when the Sites Com mittee decided to hold the con vention - startinu Aug. 2-1. The Windy City's Convention Hall al ready was booked up for that period. William S. Potter of Delaware, chairman of the Sites Commit tee, said it was "a close race de cided only this morning." Potter told the national commit- President delivered his speech here is an ancient church in the heart of Frankfurt where the first all - German parliament met in 1848. To drive home his conviction that defense of the Atlantic com munity is indivisible, Kennedy said in his speech: "The United States will risk its cities to defend yours because we need your freedom to protect ours. Hundreds of thousands of our soldiers serve with yours on this continent as tangible evi dence of that pledge. Those who would doubt our pledge or deny this indivisibility those who would separate Europe from America or split one ally from another would only give aid and comfort to the men who make themselves our adversaries and welcome any Western disarray." Reply To De Gaulle This passage in part could have reflected a veiled Kennedy refer ence to French President Charles de Gaulle, who has opposed the American blueprint of a so-called grand design for Atlantic partner ship in preference for greater Eu ropean determination of Euro pean destiny, particularly in the field of defense. Kennedy repeatedly emphasized his belief in European autonomy in all such matters, saying at one point. "The choice of paths to the unity of Europe is a choice which Europe must make." De Gaulle has forged ahead with development of a purely THE GRAND OLD PARTY The Klamath County Republican Central Committee will go into action tonight to start plans for the 1964 elections. The rally, which will replace the annual Republican picnic usually held during the summer, will start at 8 o'clock in the Winema Hotel. The party will be a welcome home for State Representa tives Carrol Howe, right, and George Flitcraft. The legislators will give a report on the recent sessions of the state legislature. Left is Ross Ragland, chairman of the central committee. The public is urged to attend the report rally being sponsored by the cen tral committee, Republican Women and ths Younq Republicans. Rate Reduce inj SIAC Member May Take Issue To Court lectric Power V Firm Mergers SALEM (UPD-State Industrial Accident Commissioner Emily P. Logan cried "kangaroo court" Monday and refused to answer charges of "inefficiency in office" leveled at her by Gov. Mark Hat field. Mrs. Logan's attorney, Ernest Bonyhadi, questioned the legality1 of procedures followed by Hat- lield, and said he had not yet de cided whether to take the Issue to the courts, or to answer the charges in a public statement. Mrs. Logan and Commission Chairman Sidney B. Lewis re ceived dismissal notices, effective today, on June 11. Hatfield charged them both with "inefficiency in office," and set Monday's hearing in case either wanted to dispute the charges. Lewis resigned Friday. A few hours later, Wilfred A. Jordan. Coos Bay Republican, was named to succeed him. Hatfield named Grants Pass Mayor Charles B. GUI Jr., a Democrat, to succeed Mrs. Logan, ellective today. Mrs. Logan refused to resign. She arrived at the board of con trol room for Monday's hearing three minutes ahead of time. Hatfield entered the room six minutes later. Some 50 spectators about half of them women crowded into one end of the room. There were not enough chairs. Some stood, others sat on the floor. The crowd over flowed into the hallway outside. Warnc Nunn, Hatfield's execu tive assistant, read a twe page statement which declared "Uie functioning of the department has1 commissioners. The arbitrary manner of the commission has caused an extremely low staff morale which, through reduced productiveness, has been costly." The statement then included 11 sets of quotes from unidentified persons criticizing department morale. "When Uie morale problem had been brought to the attention of the commissioners, they denied that a problem existed," the re port charged. The statement asserted "the two commissioners (Lewis and Mrs. Logan) have been less than candid in their dealings with the public and this office... On several occasions the two commissioners have met on com mission business and made com mission decisions without inviting the third commissioner (William Callahan) to be present. This is intolerable. Nunn concluded: 'The increas ing costs of the department, the inefficiency of operation, the low morale of employes, and the de terioration of the status of the de partment in the eyes of the leg islature and Uie public are a di rect result of the arbitrariness and lack of skill on the part of commissioners Sidney Lewis and Emily Logan. Upon arriving at this conclusion, action was taken to remove them from office." Bonyhadi then read excerpts from a five-page statement ques tioning the legality of not provid ing Mrs. Logan with specitic charges. He said "the governor's right of removal is not absolute . . , the MEDFORD Greater diversity East Side hydroelectric plant and in system operations and powerlothcr work around Upper Klam- 1 supply- resources resulting tromlnUi Lyi. i T ,r 7 n.r.i in, , merser of California Oregon Pow- Most.of the hydroelectric con- nff fh. IIS filler In nfll tlrinau I n .-r- J . ... i r - er company imo racmc rower ctrif inn in Mm K nmnfh riv.i- in a multilateral nuclear naval force within NATO. The British have accepted the plan, which in volves the United States furnish ing Polaris missiles to the pro posed NATO force. Plywood and four other members tee that "money means a great of the Big Six emplover group ,ueai in ..electing a comenuon shut down in retaliation. icily. He noted that the Atlantic A spokesman lor the TOC said City b.d included s2.).00 in casn he thought the offer made Mon-and a rent-free hall. He said the hotel situation mere was gooa. Death Asked For Slayer JACKSON. Miss. iL'PI' - The stale will seek the death penalty for a white segregationist charged with the sniper slaying of Negro civil rights leader Med- gar Evers. The suspect. Byron De La Bcckwith. was scheduled' to ap pear before City Judge James Spencer today at 4 p.m., EDT. in a preliminary hearing on a murder charge. Disl. Attv. William Waller said Monday night lie would ask the Hinds County grand jury when it convenes next Monday to indict Beckwilh lor murder. and Light two years ago made it possible earlier this year to re duce the cost of electric services in Southern Oregon by $1 million annually, a PPL official said here Monday night. The reduction in industrial. farm and residential rates was cited as one example of a num ber of the merger benefits lor power consumers, the company and its employes and the North ern California and Southern Ore gon region. The large area was represented here Monday night by more than 300 men attending a testimonial dinner honoring two PPL officials who will rclire June 30. The two guests of honor were John C. Boyie. a PPL vice presi dent and engineer who is widely known in the Klamath Falls area, and Albert S. Cummins, a PPL vice chairman and former presi dent of the California Oregon Pow er Company from 1941 to KK',2. Boyle has designed and direct ed the building of most of the electric system serving the area, including the 88.000 kilowatt capa city Klamath River plant that bears his name. From 1921 until 1929 he was manager of the com pany's Klamath Division electric canyon was done under Ins en ginceiing direction. In reciting the contributions Boyle and Cummins had made to the development of the electric syslem. Glen L. Jackson. Medford industrialist and also a 'PPL vice hairman, said both men had foreseen the merger benefits when the plan was proposed, and had worked toward us consummation The PPL official said the com pletion last year of the 230.000 volt transmission circuit Unking the Southern Oregon operations with PPL's Willamette Valley sys tem had strengthened the compa ny's entire power operations. He said the integration of the PPL and Copco generating resources on different rivers made it pos sible to exchange large amounts of energy to the advantage of all of the company s electric customers. "The larger organization of .pecialists in many fields of in dustrial and area development, geology, industry, agronomy, for- dav to be "very fair. 1 "I will ask for the death pen altv if. and when, he is indicted system and tried." Waller said. ( Boyle was chief engineer with Beckwilh. 42. of Greenwood. Copco during construction of the was turned over to Jackson pe-jLjnk Biver dam winch was com lice Monday afternoon by U.S. P ed m 1921 and was the result Hoffa Pleads innocent of a 1917 agreement with the Bu-' rcau of neclamation and the fed-1 , oral government, He also directed (he jsuWquent Vandals Hit High School Commissioner John R. Countiss III on instructions from the Jus tice Department. He is charged with the June 12 sniper slaying of Evers, who was state field secretary of the Na tional Association for the Ad vancement of Colored People (NAACPi. Beckwilh was arrested by the FBI last Saturday night at his attorney's office in Greenwood on a federal warrant. He had been held since early Sunday as a led- era I prisoner. Beckwilh, a sa.esman lor a Greenwood lertiluer tirm. was smith, Chiloquin chief of police, arrested alter the mi said a .reported this morning, fingerprint found on a nlle be-i Vandals turned water hoses on lieved used In kill Eer malchedjd,,, new 11(,n st-hool gym floor one of his. A telescopic sight of ;ani broke several windows Japanese make which was at- ihroughout the building, the police tached to the rifle also was. chief said, traced to Bcckwith. ! The gym floor, winch was rr- -- jlinisbed two weeks ago, was dam- ' ,aced beyond repair and will a d,.,..i 'have to be replaced. The vandal- Going Awoy Present .tm (,mi( hjw ft(.rurml any llimc during the past week since CHICAGO (L'Pil - Teamsters Union President James R. Hoffa today pleaded innocent to charges of conspiring with seven other men in a $20 million fraudulent loan scheme. The other seven men indicted with the Teamsters boss also pleaded innocent. Federal Judge Richard B. Aus I tin said the case, regarded as the .Justice Department s ncaviest iblnw to dale in its running battle Between M.0O0 and $."i,WrO worlhwith Hoffa, would go to trial of vandalism at the Chilnquin ()!. 7, High School was discovered Mon- Holla was in the court and day by the school janitor. Max delivered the plea of not guilty AIRPORT PEOPLE HOSTS Members of th newly elected court of the Klamath Basin Roundup and some officials were guests at luncheon in the Satellite Restaurant in (he Municipal Airport Terminal building June 25. The luncheon kicked off a round of public appearances for the court. Left ta riqht, kneeling, are Queen Sandra Wood ard Henley, and Princesses Millie Sutherland, Klamath Falls, and Jinny Doak, Chiloquln. H1TCHIN. England L'PI'-The day after Don Parker bought hi.v 40-vear-old wile a new car two weeks ago she went for her first i school through a real drive and hasn't hern seen since. Mow. Chief .Smilh said the gym was closed for the floor io dry after tlie relinishing job The vandals broke into the gym win A joint in- I am completely mystilied." ivestigation of the vandalism Parker said today, 'Beryl never; planned by the Cbiloqtun police. iinditatcd she would do a thing state police and Kl.im.ith County ilike this." I sheriff's departmenl, he said. himself. Allerward, he expressed confidence that Atlv. Gen. Robert Kennedy would not succeed i-onv.ciina h;m on the charges of manipulating loans from the teamsters' Central Stales Pen hoo Fund. "The plea of not guilty will be substantiated by evidence and it will he proven that the pension fund which is involved is not in any way in danger and that this is jusl aother propaganda move bv Bob Kennedy. Hofla said. The boss of the nation's largest union said he was paying for hn own defense. "I've got a few friends left." he said. He said he wanled a quick trial to quiet any lears of KTMins drawing money from the pension fund. estry, also can carry forward a more active and eftecuve program- on . behalf of -the growth of the company s service areas," Jackson stated. PPL reported it currently is engaged in cataloguing the minerals and other industrial raw material resources of Northern California and Southern Oregon for possible future commercial de velopment. I It was said the survey was! similar in scope to other PPL sponsored investigations, such asl the Coos Bay Industrial Water Supply search that resulted in a new paper mill locating on the Oregon Coast. The PPL official reported the tourist business in PPL areas had profited from the recreation al park and directional signs pro vided last year by PPL, and he predicted that other areas of the economy would benefit from the long range research programs fi nanced by .PPL. "In addition to the company's direct help for specific companies and industries, these long range research and economic studies are going to have an important influence on the expansion of the economy of PPL s service areas, it was stated. In attendance at the testimoni al dinner with the business and civic leaders were co-workers of Boyle and Cummins, retired cm ploves of both states and a group of PPL officers and staff from the general offices in Portland. Pair Seated On Board SALEM (UPIi Two new indus trial accident commissioners were; sworn in today by Gov. Mark Hat field, who then made an unprece dented apiiearance before . com mission employes and urged them to "continue working forward, on ward and upward to make this the best program in uie nation. Mrs. Emily Logan and Commis sion Chairman Sidney B. Lewis re ccived dismissal notices, effective today, on June II, Monday's hear ing was set in case cither wanted to dispute tlie charge. Lewis resigned Friday, and a few hours later Wilfred A. Jordan. Coos Bay Republican, was named to succeed him. Shortly after Monday's hearing. Hatfield named Grants Pass May or Charles B. Gill Jr., a Demo crat, to succeed Mrs. Logan. Jordan was sworn in at 7:5j a.m. today, then in a move that surprised several members of the governor's staff, Gill was sworn in at ft am. the inefficiency of Commissioner I and limited by statute . Logan. ( 'He charged Hatlield had failed Tlie' slatcincnt was critical of! to give Mrs. Logan 10 days in Uie management exercised by the I which to prepare an answ er to ' the charges, as the law required. we believe your failure to sup ply charges in advance, as re quested by Mrs. Logan, denies our chance to prepare a defense. It is unfair to Mrs. Logan and the public." He said Mrs. Logan was a per son of unimpeachable reputa tion," and noted she had been twice appointed to Uie commission by Hatfield. At tills point Nunn interrupted: "Are you going to discuss the charges?" Bonyhadi started to resume his statement, then was interrupted again by Nunn, and admonished to comment on Uie charges. Bonyhadi (lien asked that the hearing be adjourned "at least II) days to allow Mrs. Logan to pre pare a thoughtful response." Nunn asked are you question ing the procedure?" After conferring wilh Hatlield and Hicks, Nunn commented "the governor feels the law has been complied with. "We deny your request for a postponement. This hearing is concluded." - The hearing lasted exactly 26 minutes. This is a kangaroo court, pure and simple," Mrs. Logan said as Hatlield and his stall tiled Irom the room. ft .1 Ist. - . a.1? ki a 7 n gig-- mimM'yeJU' -i iiiiii ' - i ni-'imiiir f" nmrifriimiii t - GAS TRUCK IN JACKKNIFE The rear trailer of a gasoline tandem unit and tractor did a jackknife and flipped over on its sida at Wall Street and Esplanade Avenue about 8:45 this morning, bringing to the scene local firemen who hosed gasoline seep ing from the frailer into the sewer. The truck driver, who declined to state hit name, said he was backinq the rig out of a service station at the corner of the two streets when the "fifth wheel" of the unit failed to function and the trailer tipped over. The tanker contained about 850 gallons of gasoline and is the property of the Acme Truck ing Company of Medford.