via The-
Day's lews
By FRANK JENKINS
In Salem yesterday morning,
J. francyl Howard of Albanv
appeared in the Secretary of
State's office to file a preliminary
petition to refer the 1963 legis
lature's tax measure to a vote of
the people. Mr. Howard is presi
dent of an organization known as
the Citizen s Committee for Econ
omy and Equitable Taxations.
Attorney General Thornton says
mis morning he will assign
title for the referral measure well
within the time limit.
Meanwhile, there are indica
tions that ANOTHER group plans
to file a SECOND petition to re
fer the tax increase bill. None
but Howard's petition, however,
had been filed wnn the secretary
of state by mid-morning today.
So
il looks like a referendum meas
ure of some sort will be put be
fore the public.
It's up (o the voters, therefore,
to be doing some thinking as to
how they will vole on it in the
event that 23.186 Talid signatures
are obtained on one or another of
the petitions.
11 seems rather probable that
that will happen. '
What to do about it?
Well, there's Hamlet, the Mel
ancholy Dane, hero of the most
famous of Shakespeare's trage
dies. He was confronted with quite
a problem when he discovered
that Claudius, his uncle, and Ger
trude, his mother, had been re
sponsible for the death of his
royal father.
In his famous soliloquy, he said
to himself:
"To do or not to do, that is the
question:
"Whether H is nobler in the mind
to suffer
"The slings and arrows of out
rageous fortune.
"Or to take arms against a sea
of troubles,
"And by opposing end them."
Hamlet, you will remember,
went on to ask himself whether
it is better "to endure those ills
we have than fly to others that
we know not of."
He continued:
"Thus conscience does make
cowards of us all;
"And thus the native hue of reso
lution
"Is sicklied o'er with the palelas maae " 'reeman ol tne city
cast of thought,
"And enterprises of great pith
and moment
"With this regard their currents
turn awry
"And lose the name of action."
We can ask ourselves, along
with Hamlet, whether it is better,
in this situation that we face,
to endure those ills we have than
to fly to others that we know not
of.
Personally I think we'd better
endure the ills we have (mean
ing the tax bill enacted by the
recent legislature! than to fly to
other ills we know not of.
Who knows WHAT we might
get in a reshuffle?
Nikita Raps
JFK Talks
BERLIN U PI i Soviet Pre
mier Nikita Khrushchev Hew to
Berlin today in an attempt to
match the personal success of
President Kennedy's visit to the
divided city 48 hours earlier. He
complained that Kennedy's trip
was "directed against the inter
ests of the German people "
The Soviet leader landed at
East Berlin's Schoenefold Air
field at 2 p.m. '9 a.m. EDTi to
attend celebrations next Sunday
of the 70th birthday of East Ger
man Communist party boss Wal
ter Ulbricht and perhaps to hold
an Eastern Red bioc summit
meeting.
1
J
Lj A-1
r j r
COLLEGE HELP Sharon Russell, 19, Is spending the summer in Klamath Fells after
completing her sophomore year at Stanford University. Sharon, daughter of Mr. and
!.. A Run. II of 1 1 08 Hank Street, is employed half days by Montgomery Ward
anrt Comoanv in the credit
r.t.nl c,arvira oUeement interviewer, the orocedure
the Klamath Falls store. Bob
young employes prove to be
Weal her
Klamath Salrt, Tulalakt M Lakavlaw
Partly cloudy tlirouali Satuntay. Soma
(howan tonight and again Saturday night.
Low tonight u-40. high Saturday M-fi.
Cltaring and cold Witt Irost Saturday
niqhl. Windt wait to northwoil m.p.h.
Waakand partly cloudy and cool.
High yaitarday 71
Low tttn morning 4t
High yaar ago at
Low yaji ago 51
Procip. patt 14 hours .13
Smco Jan. 1 S.M
Sama period last yaai 1.11
'KISSING COUSIN' President John F. Kennedy offers
a big grin as he gets a Iciss from his "second cousin, once
removed," Mrs. Mary Ryan, during his visit to the family
homestead in Dunganstown, Ireland. The kiss was the
highlight of the most enthusiastic and public reunion in
Irish history. UPI Telephoto
JFK Hakes Freedom
Plea In Ireland Speech
DUBLIN i UPI '-President Ken
nedy today called on the Red-
dominated peoples behind t h e
Iron Curtain to follow Ireland's
example and never cease to
struggle for freedom.
The President's appeal was de
livered liefore a historic joint
session of the Irish parliament
shortly after Soviet Premier Niki-
ta Khrushchev arrived in East
Bcriin and accused Kennedy of
trying to play politics with the
German issue.
Kennedy was in good form after
his flying visit to Cork, where he
Float Entry
Date Hears
Klamath County businesses and
organizations have only five days
remaining to fill out an applica
tion for entering floats in the
Fourth of July parade sponsored
by the local Jaycces. Application
blanks may be obtained at the
First National Bank, the U.S. Na
tional Bank or the Klamath County
Chamber of Commerce.
The deadline is noon on Wednes
day. July 3. All prospective groups
must have contacted Virgil Bigby,
parade committee chairman, at
TU 2-3444 or TU 4 7059, or Win
ston Kurth, TU 2-2301 or TU
46237, and applications have to
be approved before the noon dead
line. Personal invitations have not
been sent out this year as in the
past, therefore anyone wishing to
participate must submit an ap
plication. The theme of the parade is "A
Holiday In Klamath County." and
trophies will be given to the float
that most appropriately depicts
the theme, the most humorous
float, and the best riding and
marching unit.
A sweepstakes trophy will be
presented to the most outstanding
float in the parade picked by a
panel of three judges.
Recorded music will be featured
along the parade route with an
nouncing stations in various loca
tions along Main Street.
department. Here the shows
Gotshall, Montgomery Ward manager, hai
eager, earnest end reiooniive to direction
Price Tea Cents 16
and given probably the most tu
multuous welcome of his career
by cheering, laughing crowds who
pushed him backwards into his
automobile in their rush to get
close to him.
"Those who suffer beyond that
wall ol sliame I saw on w'ednes
day in Berlin must not despair of
the future," Kennedy said. "Let
them instead remember the con
stancy, the faith, the endurance
and the ultimate success of the
Irish."
His appeal to the East Euro
peans to hold higher their faith in
the eventual advent of freedom
came after he had said that Ire
land, although taking no sides in
the cold war, is not neutral be
tween liberty and tyranny and I
know it never will be."
The President called upon tlic
people beyond the Berlin wall to
remember the boys of County
Wexford, which he visited Thurs
day, who are fabled in song and
story for having fought with
heart and hand, to burst in twain
the galling chain and free our
native land."
Kennedy, after paying tribute to
Ireland s struggle for its own in
dependence, said that at this time
the world the central issue
of freedom, however, is between
those w ho believe in self-determin-1
ation and those in the east who
would impose on others a harsh
and repressive Communist sys
tem. And here your nation w isely
rejects the role of go-between."
Castro Sees
Final Sweep
HAVANA (LPH - Premier Fi
del Castro declared Thursday
night that his army is launching
a "final sweep" against rebels in
Cuba who he said have been
"abandoned" by the United
States.
"They who believed that impe
rialism (the United States' would
arrive to impose its rule have
been abandoned to their fate.
Castro said in an hour-and-46-
minute speech broadcast by Ra
dio Havana.
Burton Dow, Oregon Stete
of establishing credit
at
found that
"ar v-i
.. at.. . - .-
Paget
mm iumhm Strikes
Judge Named
For Hearing
Of Sheriff
Judge Don H. Sanders of Doug
las County has been named to
serve on the Klamath County Cir
cuit Court bench at a hearing in
which Sheriff Murray "Red Brit
ton w ill reply to charges of con
tempt of court filed against him
by Deputy District Attorney Bob
Thomas.
Notice that Judge Sanders had
been assigned to preside at the
contempt hearing was made
known in a letter received Thurs
day by the county clerk from Wi
liam M. McAllister, chief justice
of tlie State Supreme Court. The
chief justice did not say when
the judge would come to Klam
ath County.
The assignment of a noninler-
ested judge to serve during the
proceedings -was made by t h e
chief justice upon the request of
the Klamath County Circuit Court
in a letter it wrote to the State
Supreme Court June 14.
The charges of contempt were
filed against Sheriff Britton dur
ing the last week of April after he
was alleged t have discussed the
Robert Huitt trial with a member
of the jury assigned to that case.
The trial was in process at the
time of the incident.
The conversation between tlie
sheriff and the juror was later
made known to the court and as
a result Judge David R. Vanden-
berg Sr. declared the case :
mistrial. j
The substance of the conversa
tion was indicated in affidavits
presented to tlie court by the jur
or and the deputy district attor
ney and sets the scene of t h c
incident in an elevator at the
courthouse.
On trial was Robert Huitt
who is charged with assault with
a dangerous weapon as the result
of the April 22 shooting of a Cali
fornia man at tlie defendant's res
idence in Agency. Huitt is accused
of wounding the victim in the
leg with a bullet discharged from
a rifle. His new trial is set tor
Aug. 6 in Judge Vandcnbcrg's
court.
Lodge Gets
High Post
WASHINGTON 'UPD Presi
dent Kennedy is sending a lead
ing Republican to a diplomatic
.7 J . rC.T' . (line Klamath County Jail for ap-
hc State Department as one o matcl m , ..wjthout
the decisive battlegrounds rfj wj(h'any cnme
modern history. ,timfi being afforded any of his
Kennedy ar.-ounced Thursday
in Dublin that be intends to nom
inate Henry Cabot Lodge Jr , for
mer U.N. ambassador and I960
GOP vice presidential candidate,
as American ambassador to Vict
Nam.
Lodge will take over tlie post
in Saigon this fall, succeeding
Frederick E. Nolting Jr.
Southeast Asia in general, and I general's conference in Salem.
Viet Nam in particular, have' A reliable source said that i'
been for several years the majoritlie case is brought to court f
area of Communist strategy lor j jury w ill determine to w hat ex
expansion by internal subversion tent Gallagher has been dam
and guerrilla warlare. 'aged, if any, and if so. who, oi
Ability
By Rl'TII KING
The ability of youth in employ-
ment areas is being proved this
summer, and brought to public at
tention through a cooperative pro
gram. "Put Youth On the Jub."
Tlie project, undertaken by a
local committee of representative
groups with tlie assistance of
the Oregon Slate Employment
Service, is of definite benetil not
only to the young people seeking
work, but to employers as weil
In a short survey made this
week, those who haxe given boys
and girls, young men and ymmc
women up to 24 years, an ojifnir
tunity to earn, without exception,
were enthusiastic at the sincer
ity of effort on the part of the
oung employes.
Since the end of the school year
in high school and colleges wk
possibilities hae nwt limited in
the Klamzth country, but de'pi'e
KLAMATH FALLS, OKEGOM, FRIDAY, JUNE 28, 19tl3
k2 lAXj ft ESS M
RASH OF SIGNS Barry
rash of "Goldwater For President" signs prior to his addressing the Young Republican
Convention in San Francisco. Goldwater, the unofficial leader of the Young.Republi
cans for the 1964 nomination, put the blast on American liberals claiming they wer
"morally bankrupt." UPI Teleohot
Goldwater Given
SAN FRANCISCO (UPli It
had all the flavor and color of
Republican presidenth! nomi
nating convention.
The man who" was tliere.
Delegates roared their approval
of him. They brandished banners,
buttons and books during repeal
ed interruptions of a speech by
the natioa's conservative standard
bearer. Sen. Barry Goldwater.
Goldwater, addressing the na
tional Young Republican conven
tion, Thursday lashed out at lib
Four Law
Charged
A civil lawsuit charging four
county law enforcement officers
with forcibly detaining a 19-year-
old Klamath Indian youth in tlie
county jail for 105 days without
nermitting him due process of
was filed in the county
Clerk's Office. I p.m., yester
day.
Tlie suit, filed for $7,500 on
ibchaif of Osborne Ixe Gallagher
by Vandenberg & Loo. attorneys
at law, names as defendants
Sherilf J. Murray Britton, Dis
trict Attorney Dale Crabtrec. Dep
uty Sheriff Alvie Youngblood, and
John Webber, special investiga
tor to the district attorney.
The complaint cites that Galla
gher was forcibly imprisoned in
ifsa prooes!es anfj ithout being
taken before a judge or magis
trate."
Soon after tlie suit was filed.
Constable Guy Merrill served
two of the four court summons
upon Sheriff Britton and Webber,
Youngblood was not served at
the time, nor was Crahtree, who
h attending a two-day attorney
Of Youth
'this problem more than 50 have
j m placed through tlie employ
ment service and others through
tlieir own clforts.
Some ate working full-time, oth
ers pait-time. Work found by the
younger people has not contneteo
wilh work that can be done by
older people also seeking employ
ment. The employment office has
available a counseling service
that gives the individual not yet
able to recognize his potential in
lelalion to fields of work, an op.
portuniiy to find hn ability irvcl.
and a testing progiam or aptitude
tests provide still further infor
mation on the applicant's chances
for finding employment.
Tlie counseling is by pi ofession -
al people in that lie.d
There aie many ro,voi,s why ! was that proud to be a wage earn
students want to woik. Must ofiner."
Goldwater turns to aides in wonrtarmnnt a ha Is mat wltr,
erals and President Kennedy.
"It is the moral bankruptcy of
the liberal politicians which is
causing the young people to move
toward the Republican party,"
the Arizona Republican senator
said.
They are tlie reactionaries.
They haven't had a new idea for
30 years."
He said tlie liberals are ob
sessed w ith economic solutions for
all problems and have entered
into a "cynical alliance" with big
Officers
By Youth
uliicli members of the four named
in tlie lawsuit, is liable.
Gallagher was among a num
ber of youths law enforc?ment
officers found drinking in a Fort
Klamath hotel Feb. 21, and la
ter transported to Klamath Kalis,
where they were interrogated.
Gallagher's companions were
released soon after, hut lie w-as
detained in tlie county jail until
June 7, when Judge Donald A. W.
Piper ordered his release follow
ing court action on a writ of ha
beas corpus by a local attorney.
In a written statement sub
mitted to the court before the
hearing on the writ. Sheriff Brit
ton had said that "Gallagher was
being held in tlie Klamath County
Jail to answer to the charge of
violation of probation and was
waiting action by tlie district at
torney's office and our courts."
The remark about Gallagher's
probation was in reference to a
six-month suspended sentence
imposed upon the plaintiff by
Judge Piper, acting for District
Court Judge Robert Kerr, last
Dec. 24. Gallagher, cited on the
charge of "minor in possession
of alcohol," was on probation
on his own recognizance; he was
not assigned to a probation offi
cer. In a similarly prepared state
ment, District Attorney Crabtree
denied having knowledge that the
(Continued en Page 4)
Proven
tliem ho)0 to continue Uieir edu
cations, others need to give aid
in (lie home, wfiere perhaps In
come for some reason has been
curtailed.
Still others need clothing or
money for dental hills and eye
care. There were no frivolous
answers given by any of the
young people looking for work and
many have been interviewed.
Job seekers outnumlier avail
able employment.
Tlie "Put Youth on the Job Com
mittee" asks that everyone with
a job imssihility find something
lor boy or a girl to do to earn
a hit of cash if the employment
! period is only for an hour or two.
As one elderly employer said
this week, "That dollar went into
1 pocket and he walked out ol
I htit like it was a million, he
Telephone
Ovation
city political bosses. He said city
machines were a "national dis-j
grace" and any politicians who
accepted their supitort were "pho
ny liherals" without the ideals of
true liberals who pioneered the
movement.
Hie convention delegates. 75
per cent of whom voted support
tor Goldwater as the 1964 GOP
presidential nominee in an in
formal poll, were prompted to
pandemonium by the Arizona del
egation which arrived here with
2,000 pounds of signs, campaign
buttons and books to extol their
state a senator.
The 55-minute speech was
hailed with demonstrations of del
eoates wavine Goldwater ban.lually.
ners, tlie Stara and Stripes and
Confederate flags.
Observers compared it with old-
time nominating inventions with
,Z f.Vi.i . I -, ,Jwi .ri,
ft I
Goldwater, taking an indirect
poke at President Kennedy, said
tlie stern cold fact is that no
Democrat can be elected to na
tional olfice today who is not un
der deep and unbreakable obliga
tion to the corrupt big-city
machines."
He told the crowd betweeni
cheers that America's military
chieftains should be asked for
their opinions on tlie U. S. nil-
lear test ban proposals.
Goldwatcr's speech followed a
prediction by former California
GOP Sen. William F. Knowland
that tlie Republicans could carry
the South in the next election and
did not need to win cither New
York or California to elect a
president. Knowland, editor and
assistant publisher of Die Oak
land (Calif.) Tribune, told the
convention that "there is no
Southern state we need to con
cede to the New Frontier."
BANK EMPLOYES Hazel Robertson, seated, book
keeper and machine operator, and Sharon Mitchell, sec
retary, standing at right, are employed at the Bank of
Klamath Falls. Frank Tomic, cashier, in charge of employ
ment, left, and F. E. (Jaekl Holt, executive vice presl
dent, are enthusiastic about the ability shown by young
people in the field of banking. Sharon Mitchell it from
Fresno, the wife of a Kingsley Field Air Force man. Haiel
Robertson, a graduate of Klamath Union High School,
class of 1962, dauqhter of Mr. and Mrs. Chester Rob.
ertson, 2055 Greensprings Drive, took aptitude tests at
the Oregon State Employment office which resolved her
entrance at an IBM training school.
TU 4-8111 No. 7180
Tkeata
Two Unions Say Talks
Not Making Progress
PORTLAND (UPl)-Leaders of
two Northwest lumber unions
threatened more strikes today in
lumber industry dispute that
already has idled some 19,000
workers.
The announcement was made
after tlie International Woodwork
ers of America (1WA reported no
progress in contract talks with tlie
"Big Six" employer group, com
posed of St. Regis Paper, U.S.
Plywood, Weyerhaeuser, Interna
tional Paper, Crown Zcllerbach
and Dayonier.
1WA Regional President Harvey
Nelson told newsmen Thursday
his union modified its demands on
travel time for loggers during
Thursday's talk. He said tlie union
also rejected an employer offer
concerning weekend working
hours. There was no mention of
wage discussions.
The meeting was recessed sub
ject to call by either side or by
Icderal mediators.
Officials of the 1WA and live
Lumber and Sawmill Workers Un
ion ILSWI. which also is involved
in the dispute, said the two unions
would work together to bring the
strike to a successful conclusion.
They struck St. .Regis and U.S.
Plywood plants in Oregon, Wash
ington and Northern California
June 5 and the other four mem
bers of the "Big Six" shut down
in retaliation.
Talks also have been recessed
with the Timber Operators Coun-
il, which represents some 196
firms from California to Alaska
Earl Hartley, executive secre
tary of the LSW, said the unions i"""""-"-"""'""" "
would settle the' dispute at their I bnk. insurance com-
leisure, "even if it takes all sum. P"" ,ner volum
mer." He estimated aome 70.000 maUera pre sorting marl.
- ' workors might, be affected even
" aia pians lor rxicnaing
(strike are not completed and
dined to pinpoint any eocclfe
firms,
.. fompflniM we
believe best able to pay and to
iinflimnni tlu inflictrv ii MWnrTIITA
influence tlie industry to recognize
the justieo of our demands, Net
son told newsmen.
Hartley said unions feel large
lumber firms have "missed tlie
hall in the last few years" on the
issue of lumber workers' salaries.
Asked if the IWA was satisfied
Quiz Asked
UNITED NATIONS (UPI I Sec
retary General Thant said today
he has asked U.N. officials to In
vestigate charges that a call-girl
ring is operating inside the head
quarters of tlie world body.
The charges have been made in
New York newspapers over the
past three weeks. A woman ac
credited here as a temporary
press correspondent was charged
in e city court Thursday with
prostitution.
- i"w,-u- i ,ij"''t-' . rt
i f -slJ
' aVv , ...
Weather
AGRICULTURAL POftSCAST
Cool and untMunablt wvittiir contin
uing with piriods of fthowtrt through
t unity, indication of good chanct of
(roil Saturday night. Haying outlook ft
only lair with Ihrtat of rtoccurring
thowtra.
with tlie offer made by Simpson
Timber Co.. an independent firm,
Tuesday, Nelson said (lie union
agreed only in principle. Simpson
proposed a five-cent per hour in
crease in travel time pay for log
gers and is now considering a un
ion request for a 10-cent increase.
Nelson said the "Big Six" failed
to respond to this proposal Thurs
day. "They didn't even give us
the courtesy of their considera
tion," Jio commented,
The LSW is scheduled to meet
with the "Big Six" Monday.
'ZIP' Code
Speeds Mas!
Delivery
Wbat is tlie ZIP code now be
ing implemented in Klamath
County and all post olfices across
the nation?
Klamath Falls Postmaster Chet
Langslet explained that the code
is a five dieit distribution coda
- 1 designed to speed mail deliveries
by cutting down on tlie steps re
quired to move a letter from send
er to addressee.
It la designed to increase the
utilization of electronic data
- FTC u S'1? 1 m
- The code Is also expected to sV-
In Hie manual distribution of'maif
me (:" i invo y ior mecn.
tie - ianizea nisu-iDution in post oricri
wneo auitable equipment Is avail-
(able. The Portland Post Office, for
instance, is already equipped with
I sum machinery.
I In Ia nnmilalnj sh. ill. II, J
three digits will identify the main
focal points of air, highway and
rail transportation, and the last
two digits will identify the post
office or delivery station.
fn cities that have focal postal
zones, the first three digits will
identify tlie area, state and city
and tlie last two will designate the
local zone number.
The new coding plan, for the
first time, will permit the Post
Office Department to short-cut
repeated address reading. Tlie
addrese on mail which has no pre
sorting by the mailer must often
by read as many as eight or 10
times by postal employes. Each
handling slows the process of mail
dispatch and adds to tlie oppor
tunity of human error.
Tlie mailer is not expected to
memorize hundreds of ZIP codes.
He is expected to learn the ZIP
code for his own delivery area and
use it in the return address on all
correspondence. In answering
mail, ZIP codes should be taken
from return addresses on incom
ing mail and used in the return
correspondence.
The code number should be
placed on correspondence follow
ing the city and state in address
es. For example. Herald and
News, P.O. Rox 4I, Klamath
Falls, Ore. 97H01. The national
deadline for implementation of the
code Is July 1.
Following are tlie ZIP code
numbers for tlie Klamath falls
Post Office and all outlying post
offices affiliated with the Klam
ath Falls Sectional Center:
Klamath Falls 'M
Olrne Rural Station, KLam-
alh F ills 7603
Lake O' Woods Rural Sta.,
Klamath Falls 7fio3
Crater Lake Rural Sta.,
Klamath Falls $nm
Adel
Realty 9TC!1
Bly 97K22
Bonanza 97623
Chlloquin 97624
Dairy 97625
Fort Klamath 97626
Keno 97627
Klamath Agency 9762S
Ukevlew 97630
Malin 976.12
Merrill 976M
Midland 97634
New Pine Creek 9761$
Paisley 97(06
Plush 976.T7
Silver Lake 9763S
Christmas Valley Rural
Station, Silver Lal.e rW
Sprague River 976.1
Summer Lake 97644)
1 1