PAGE t
HERALD AM)
Committee For Barry Goldwater
Stages Large-Scale Rehearsal
l' WASHINGTON UPH -The na
jional Draft Goldwater Commit
tee staged a dress rehearsal for
the 1964 Kepublican convention
Thursday night with dancing pla
cards, small scale demonstra
tions and chants of "We want
Barry."
". The job aliead is to convince
Sen. Barry Goldwater of Arizona
that he has grass roots support
convertible into delegate strength
to win the GOP presidential nom
ination at San Francisco next
July.
. Goldwater admirers from many
'states assembled in the National
uard Armory to cheer every
Mention of their conservative
lero and ,to give Bronx cheers to
.President Kennedy and other
Jew Frontier officials.
.- Barry No Present
When the meeting began, police
'estimated the crowd at more than
7,000. Peter O'Donnell, Tcx.is Re-
''iantfMaMI
I guess I'll
Have to Hide!
All I did was wear my
new A-1 RACERS to
school. You'd think I
was a star, the way
the girls mob me.
I'm not conceited
...I know they're
RACERS fans
Racers
lack
$4.98 to 9.99
Chargfl 'cm at Drews reg
ular 30 day chorga accounts
or revolving with up to 6
months to pay.
Manstore
Shop both stores Downtown
at 733 Main and Town and
Country Shopping Center
fx - n
I ? "a
if
He's Mel Berry a new addition to the used
car stoff at Eccles Motors. Mel has spent over
20 years in the automotive business, all right
here in the Klamath Basin. Many of these years
Included auto service work, so Mel is completely
qualified to help you select your next used car.
If you haven't met Mel, come in and get ac
quainted. If you know him, come in and say
hello. He'll be glad to talk cars with you ony
time. ECCLES MOTORS
606 S. 6th
NEWS, Klamath Falls, Ore.
nublican chairman and head of
the draft movement, later told
the audience that the official es
timate had been increased to 9,
000. Goidwatcr, who is not an an
nounced candidate, was observing
the holiday in Prescott, Ariz.
But the principal speaker, Sen.
John Tower of Texas, told the
crowd that, if Goldwater could
see the rally, there would be no
doubt about his decision to run
for the presidency.
Tower. O'Donnell and F. Clifton
White, director of the draft com
mittee, all sought to answer crit
ics of the Goldwater campaign.
These critics complain that the
campaign depends loo much on
the South, that it would give
Child Thrown
it ki ll
Fill IMUIIIL.I
rj
SAN MATEO, Calif. UPI '-Po
lice today investigated the chill
ing case of a San Carlos, Calif.
mother who said she threw the
body of her 2-year-old daughter
off the Golden Gate Bridge.
The mother, Anna Buckleman,
38. underwent psychiatric exami
nation Thursday at San Mateo
General Hospital. She was held
under what a hospital spokes
man called "security guard" to
prevent a possible new suicide
attempt.
Mrs. Buckleman said the child
fell down the cellar stairs 10 days
ago.
Early the next morning, while
her husband slept, she found her
hild dead in bed, she told au
thorities. She drove to the bridge.!
threw the tiny pajama-clad body
over the side but then could not
get up the nerve to jump herself,
she said.
Instead, she fled to New York
where she attempted to kill her
self with an overdose of sleep
ing pills.
Tile Coast Guard said no trace
of the child's body has been
found under the bridge. An in
fant's body found in New York
City was not that of the Buckle
man girl, according to police.
Capt. Edwin Mailliard of the1
San Carlos police department said
wo are trying to gather tho evi
dence to prove or disprove her
story, l II meet with members of
the stuff of district attorney
Keith Surcnson and we will put
it all together including the doc
tor's reports on Mrs. Buckleman
Then we'll decide what action to
take, if any."
2 Reported
Missing
OKEGON CITY (UPIl -
Searches were under way today
for a 65-year-old man and an 8-
year-old boy reported missing In
different areas of Clackamas
County.
Terry Anderson, 8, Portland
was believed lost near Camp1
Howard about 12 miles northeast
of Sandy, police said. The camp
is a Catholic youth facility.
Deputies said the boy may have
walked away from the camp.
Jonn rckiman, MUwaukic, was
reported missing near Estacada
following an Independence Day
picnic.
WALLS CLEANED
BY MACHINE
Pruned for ptrfeol rrtulli. Hivn
pilnt and redecorating. Fret E
UoiAtei. BAKRY'S
flame Walt (leaning Service
5lil llnllablrd St. m. TV
IS
THIS
Friday. July 3. 1963
away big blocs of electoral votes
in populous eastern states ana
that it would peak too soon.
Tower said only Goldwater was
"truly national candidate" in
contrast to a regional candidate
or a "pressure group" candidate.
Counts All Stales
White said tho Goldwater strat
egy did not call for writing of.'
any state, but he showed slides
indicating that Goldwater could
win 301 electoral votes, 31 more
than needed, without such states
as New York, Pennsylvania, New
Jersey, Michigan and California.
The biggest cheer came when
White showed s slide indicating a
Goidwatcr sweep of the South. A
southerner ran in front of the
platform waving the 'stars and
bars of the Confederacy.
Hep. John M. Ashbrook of Ohio
said the nomination of Goldwater
would enable the GOP to carry
20 more congressional districts in
I lie South next year and 20 more
in the Midwest.
Macmillan
Has Woes
LONDON (UPI) - Two more
sharp setbacks at polls added to
the woes of Prime Minister 'Har
old Macmillan's scandal plagued
Conservative government today.
Conservative losses in ay-elec-
tions at West Bromwich and
Deptford Thursday were the lat
est in a series of reverses that
have brought opposition Labor
cries for Macmillan t? resign or
call immediate general elections.
The Labor party won boih. con
tests as expected Thursday, but
tne conservatives made poor
showings that reflected their sag
ging prestige among the public.
Labor, which has been out of
office for II years, is confident o.'
winning the next election. Mac
millan is not compelled to call an
election before October, 1964, and
he is expected to hold off as long
as possible in hopes of restoring
Conservative prestige badly hit
by the Profumo scandal.
nic Protumo sex-and - security
scandal is only the latest blow
against the conservation position
over the last 18 months. Macmil
lan lias been hit by Britain's fail
ure to gain admission to the com
mon market, by dissension over
Britain's nuclear policy, by wide
spread unemployment, and by a
scries of security leaks.
The Profumo scandal has been
kept before the public by the pre
trial vice hearing of Dr. Stephen
Ward, a society osteopath and
part-time artist. Ward intro
duced former War Minister John
Profumo to 21-year-old party girl
Christine Kceler, whom the osteo
path is accused of procuring for
prostitution.
Ward, charged on eight vice
counts, is free on bail awaiting a
trial date.
Weather
Temperatures during the 24
hours ending at 4 a.m. PDT to
day. High Low
Astoria 07 51
Baker 85 51
Brookings 65 53
Med ford 7B 55
Newport 64 50
N. Bend 67 50
Pendleton 4 62
Portland 73 5H
Redmond 81 51
Salem 74 55
The Dalles 7!l 51
Chicago 71 64
Ixs Angeles ' 82 ' 62
New York 82 63
San Fran. 65 56
Washington 81 60
Portland Vancouver: Partly
cloudy tonight, mostly sunny Sat
urday: high 75-80; low toniglit 50.
Western Oregon: Partly cloudy
tonight, mostly sunny Saturday,
high 08 coast, 75-85 inland; low
48-56.
Eastern Oregon: Mostly fair;
highs 75-85; low 46-58.
Tatoosh to Blanco: Small craft
warnings Tatoosh to Astoria for
south to southeast winds 22-32, be
coming southwest 13-22 late today
through Saturday; winds south of
pARCHA
MARCHA cAuifKt
I Opfii . Mart .:" 1
I Jim Hutton - Jane Fonda I
1 rtRIOlt OF .IUl;RTMtNT I
m iarlnnn
Silunlar
MA A !A KI.TTI.K ON
X.OI.II MAI IM1N ALU'
t'AKM
f Katurdty
Hi Onlv . : k (MlX
Mtllltr trr (I ndrr I'D
Mrr.hanl spnnkortd K
S Mi A I'a hMtlr n U 1
I AWt'tlonaliTf farm 1
I I'ltta I l'rlahi I
1 Sin. A Man. f
ClrUhlft ( KMla'a tatbrr i
Jarqeallnt KannaAVa M
Atlan JiBa)r W
X . -. - ,-.eA .
i- ik'2P?
: . ,
MARKET BOMBED A corner of this St. Louis supermarket was blown out by an ex
nlosion in the third of a series of chain food store bombinqs in the St. Louis area in
recent months, explosion in
make a total of eight stores
Colored Association Says
Mayor Triggered 'Uproar'
CHICAGO (UPIl Leaders of
the National Association for the
Advancement of Colored People
iNAACP) said today members of
new "direct action" civil rights
groups triggered the uproar that
drove Mayor Richard J. Daley
from a NAACP Independence Day
rallv.
The people who interrupted
the meeting were not members
of the NAACP and were not part
of our rally," Roy Wilkins, execu
tive secretary of the organiza
tion, said.
Daley got only as far as the
second sentence of his speech at
a massive Fourth of July "free
dom" rally when about 50 young
persons both Negro and white-
surged down (he aisles with signs
and shouts.
He withstood the calls of
"Tokenism must go. Down with
Daley. We don't need Daley,
ghettoes, Jim Crow schools" for 11
minutes. Then, with a shrug, the
poker-faced Daley wheeled and
walked from the platform.
It was apparent the inciden
carried far more significance to
the NAACP, holding its 54th con
vention this week, and Daley, one
of the most powerful Democrats
in the nation, than a mere inter
ruption of a rally.
Cites Other Groups
Willie Ludden, of Atlanta, Ga.
a NAACP national staff member,
said the demonstration "seemed
to be planned by CORE and
SNCC."
These groups, the Congress on
Racial Equality and the Student
Nonviolent Coordinating Commit
tee, have taken the civil rights
struggle to lunch counters, buses
and streets. The NAACP has tra
ditionally sought to settle civil
rights disputes in the courts.
Only last week, on the eve of
what was termed its "year of de
cision convention, Wilkins noted
Roundup
Astoria mostly south to southwest
7-16; chance of showers.
The Dalles and Hood River:
Partly cloudy tonight, mostly sun
ny Saturday; high 75-85; low 53
58; gorge winds west 10-15.
Bend, Baker and La Grande:
Generally fair tonight and Satur
day; highs 110-85; low 50-56 north
to 40-46 south.
Five Day Weather
Western Oregon: Highs mostly
75 - 85; lows 46-54; chance few
showers Monday or Tuesday.
Eastern Oregon: Highs mostly
80-SK); lows 46-08; little or no ram.
Climber Sets
JFK Meet
SEATTLE (UPI' - ML Everest
onquerors Jim Whittaker of Red
mond and Luther Jerstad of Gig
Harbor arc scheduled to leave
here Saturday morning to keep an
appointment with President Ken
nedy.
The climbers, accompanied by
their wives, are scheduled to de
part at 8: 15 a.m. aboard a United
Airlines plane tor a lllghl to
Friendship Airport in Baltimore.
Thev arc to talk with the Pres
ident Monday, after rendezvousing
with oilier members of the Ever
est parly.
Klamath Falll, Oraon
ublnMil dajllv (aitaol Sal.) and Sum)a
safvinq sniimwrn u..,
and Norlharn Calllornla
by
Klamalh PuSlnnlnt Camnany
MaIh at Eiplanada
Fhom TUxado a ll"
ui caalland. Publlthar
Inland aa iacmdlal mallar ! n
pl o'Hra at Klnmatn -aui. uraaon.
en uul 10. undar act al Can-
..... i,..k i iiia sacodd-clasi roit-
and al additional malllnf oiikoii
I Maul ' ' "
Wontnt MM
I Vaat Ml 00
Mall In Advdnco
I Monm '
Mentha
AUDIT
luhtcrl
(hair Harah
umAU o circulation i. ,h w iix w$f o..t .uk. bim - 1 - m. - a TrrwN.rfti OPA ' 'A Iff H 1111 II I I I'1 in ni i iiiiimi mi
ml Niwt. pit pnMt
bfrr I p.m. I
iTUied anil
- .....
this store and another a
bombed in five months
that the NAACP's role as spokes-1
man for the Negro was being
challenged. :
"Other organizations furnish the
noise and get the publicity while
the NAACP furnishes the man
power and pays the bills," Wil
kins said.
It was the second time during
the convention Daley had touched
off an outburst.
On the opening day, Daley said
in a speech that there were no
Negro1 ghettoes in Chicago. Dr. L.
H. Holman, NAACP Illinois presi
dent, disagreed in strong lan
guage and told the convention
delegates, "some of you who go
and bring out that tremendous
vote for him better work on him."
Daley Led Parade
Earlier Thursday, Daley helped
lead a two-hour "freedom march"
through downtown Chicago and
walked side by side with Wilkins.
Waters
Arnoss
1 Sea off Alaska
7 Sea
13 Yeast
Atlantic
55 Run-down
condition
,S8 Greek goddess
57 Describe again
14 Dross
15 Printer's arrors 50 Wild donkey
16 Sweets
l)()WV
1 1.nst blood
1! Weird
3 Unusual
4" Yellow bugle
5 Seine
8 Grind teelt
7 Insure
fl Shield
17 Coloring
18 Southern
college tab.)
20 Allow
21Jelty
23 Hebrew pricat
27 Scolded
32 Bay window
33 Worship
34 Aroina
35 Girl's name
3H Sheriff
H9 Arabian chief
40 Strait
42 Wager
45 Roy's nickname
46 Shout
)!( Special trip
5'J Islands in
fi and Magog
iu r.pocnai
1 1 Scottish town
12 American
cartoonist
19 Fairy queen
til Drooped
22 Borders
2.1 Antarctic sea
24 Rncuish
T 12 13 4 15 16 I? 18 19 110 111 112
u Jib 19 J 20
1 11J I-" -1 ill
Z4 124 125 126 ""121 28 129 130 131
32 i 3l
34 35
36 37 3?t 39
42 143 144 I 45 46 147 48
49 50 lb I 52 53 154
55 56
I I I I I I 5
h ri B I V I 1 r J cSsaasa, I sTratra IbiTh . a
Two tough Texans take on the whole Apache nation! -""BISHOP 3 j'Jitcl
" ' h'VB i3$a i3r" "XTSj rj'xj&lli a very unlikely imijmiSWM-
Vti'VJT?u7 ; i f ROBERT MITCHUM BvOj
1 m ra3 WWt- STARTS SUN D AY
1 ' - - --AHr---"-ihHaa"-' r H' KaCTTlj . I.W" I VI -. tdiii
ADMISSION THIS
e?rum2t.
i food store
at the same time
UPI Telephoto
Police estimated the demonstra-
tors numbered 4o,0O0.
The march ended at the band-
.shell in Grant Park, overlooking
the shores of Lake Michigan.
When Daley rose to speak, the
shabbily dressed demonstrators
roared down the aisles
After Daley stalked from the
speaker's rostrum, many in the
crowd of 30.000 took up the jeer
ing and stopped the Rev. James
H Jackson, president of the Na
tional Baptist Convention and
prominent Negro civil rights lead
ers, from speaking.
The Rev. Dr. Jackson faced the
shouting throng for nine minutes
and gave up.
The crowd apparently was an
gered at the Rev. Dr. Jackson's
support earlier this week for
President Kennedy's plea for a
moratorium on mass civil rights
demonstrations.
Answer to Previous Puiile
25 Coffin support 42 Great
-Lake
2fi Nigerian tribe 4:1 Sea bird
:b nrsi man
44 Waste
(Bil.)
allowance
46 Kocky
projection
47 Ploxus
48 Belgian river
fill damncc
fil Nothing
53 Mallayana
Buddhist (Japan;
54 Wood sorrel
29 Kent
:io . Canal
31 Anllered
ruminants
37 Willful
destroyer
38 First woman
41 Site of Snake
River
INCAGlMINT KIDS (UhJ.r
llHlOIUI I CJAY FiLA0S
I otp op A T E I PEIV ETC
Pjl XMgHA LL eMe riy
B E A RHa EiaPlWAFE
A R SBAM TiSMSjC J &
N 0 TIE I ST" RIATML- A G
D I EIT 5 AINjTiMIA'T E
scr A n P a R A l b Et s
rt MARTIN f YORK ufi CAMPOS ..PICKENS 130 IIS(?iI
Marksman's
Who Killed
AMERICL'S, Ga. (UP1 A
hulking convict fell to a marks
man s bullet Thursday under a
pecan tree a hundred miles from
the Florida town where, a few
hours earlier, he killed three men
in a desperate bid for freedom.
His terrified 14-year-old hostage
grabbed his pistol and shot him
four more times as he slumped
dying over the beginnings of the
Buster Green
Wins Trophy
LAKEVIEW Buster Green of
Redmond qualified for the all
around winner in events at the
Lake County Junior Rodeo held
last Saturday and Sunday at the
lie received the saddle and
trophies. Running him a close
second in points was the all-
around girl winner, Deke Fitz
gerald. Susanville.
A good turnout was reported
for tne first junior rodeo here and
association members are planning
now to make it an annual event
Winners in the senior events
were Dick Gore, tie - down calf
roping; Buster Green, bareback
riding and boys' cow riding; Deke
Fitzgerald, girls' barrel racing;
Bonnie Nordman. Richmond,
girls' pole bending; Jimmy Wat
son, Hilt, Calif., cow cutting;
Sharon Bernaf, Corvallis, girls'
cow riding.
Winning in the junior events
were Greg Brooks, Arlington,
break-away calf roping; Stu Wil
son, boys call ruling; S t a r 1 a
Beymcr, Klamath Falls, girls'
caif riding; Danny Capehart lall
around junior champion i, Prine-
ville. boys' barrel racing and pole
bending.
In the special events Richard
Tupper won the team roping; San
dra Eubanks, goat tying;
and Richard Partin and Jimine
Watson, senior team roping.
The hard luck award went to
Arthur Brown of Ccdarville.
Police Break
Uprising
PARIS (UPI) - Riot police
armed with rifles and truncheons
Thursday broke up farmers' dem
onstrations aimed at blocking
traffic across four bridges on the
Durance River in southern
Fiance.
Police said 27 persons were ar
rested at Meyrargues. one of the
four river points. No injuries
were reported.
The farmers, who have battled
troops with tomatoes and bricks
in the past week, are still dis
gruntled over produce prices
despite strong government meas
ures to help them.
They began gathering shortly
after dawn at Meyrargues. Mire
beau, Cadenct and Pertuis with
tractors and trucks. Republican
security companies broke
through the demonstrators' lines
and forced them to move their
vehicles.
President Charles de Gaulle's
cabinet announced Wednesday
that the importing of farm prod
ucts would cease while the prices
of farm goods in the country
were "unusually low."
Farmers throughout the coun
try have demonstrated and
brawled to protest low prices for
their produce. Southern farmers
laid down a July 4 ultimatum
for the halt of imports and threat
ened to destroy any foreign
farm produce in sight.
12) J0 AVwIti 1.00
Bullet Fells
Three In Freedom Bid
foxhole he was trying to dig.
He was Melvin Weaver, 23, a
squat, 240-pound life-term convict
who started his briel, Bloody lour
through the limjlight at Marian-
i, Fla.
He had been taken to a hospi
tal there after being overcome by
smoke when he set fire to the
bunk in his jail cell. He seized
Deputy Sheriff Aaron Creel's pis
tol. shot him to death, and then
killed Deputy Allen Finch when
Finch rushed to Creel's aid.
Hubert Mayo, who was just
visiting at the hospital, stepped
into the corridors to see what
was the matter and Weaver shot
him to death.
Forced Entrance
Weaver bolted out of the hos
pital and forced his way into the
home of Dick Sangaree. He told
Sangaree to give him clothes.
then forced the man, his wife and
their 8-ycar-old daughter to drive
him north.
He ordered the Sangarccs out
of the car at Colquitt, Ga., and
continued north. Near Smithville,
about 50 miles north of Colquitt,
he saw three youths standing by
U. S. Highw to.
Screeching Ij a halt, he
whipped up both of the pistols he
had taken Irom the dead deputies
and told the youths "don't move."
Two highway patrolmen drove
up and Weave; shouted "don't
move or I'll blow your head
off."
Adding their weapons to In:
collection, he got into the patrol
car. looked at the youths and
said "I need a hostage."
I'll take the little one," he de
cided. He forced 4-foot-6 inch tall
Ricky Hale, an orphan, into the
car beside him.
Weaver's wild ride ended at
two-room shanty by the hiehwav
tnree miles nu'th of Ameniu
When the woman inside refusea
to let him in, Ricky said he fig
ured "I was done for."
Took Cover In Grove
But Weaver ordered him into
the pecan grove behind the house
just as cars full of officers began
Churchill Home
LONDON (UPIl Sir Winston
Churchill, looking tired and pale,
arrived home Thursday from a
nolidoy in Monm .arlo and
cruise among the Creek islands.
The B8-year-oU former prime
minister, an unlit king-size cigar
in his mouth, was helped down
the steps of an airliner and
driven straight home.
GATES OF'EN 8:15 - SHOW AT DUSK!
LAST TIMES TONITE
DEE WM
SATURDAY ONLY
.'V : ... ... 'Vh
Convict
surrounding the field. Weaver
ripped off several shots, grazing
the scalp of a highway patrolman.
Frantically Weaver began trv-
ing to dig a foxhole under a pe
can tree. But highway palrol
marksman Robert Benson, carry
ing a .30 caliber rifle, was work
ing his way behind Weaver.
Benson got to within 150 yards
of the killer. "I figured it was
the best shot I could get and
shot." He drilled the diggingkill
er through the heart.
Ricky said he thought the shot
came from Weaver. "1 looked at
him and he was scrounged over
with a pistol in his hand."
"I picked up the pistol and
started shooting at him. 1 just
pulled the trigger and started
shooting until the gun was
empty."
Ricky dropped the gun then,
ran across the field in terror and
leaped over a fence. Officers
caught up with him on the road
and told him his ordeal was over.
Doors Open Ton ire 6:45
Continuous Saturday and
Sunday from 12:45
GREAT ADVENTURE . .
AND IT IS ALL TRUE!
STEVE MCQUEEN
JAMES GARNER
RICHARD
ATTENBOROUGH
Panavision Color De Luxe
lltEASEO 1HIU UNITED AITItlt
AUDIE
MURPHY
DAN
DURYIA
IOAN
O'BRIEN
ROCK HUDSON
Mist CORNELL BORCHERS
GEORGE SANDERS
j STEVE MCQUEEN I
I JAMES GARNER I
1 RICHARD r
I 1