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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 8, 1963)
Tax Collection Report Shows Seven Millionaires In - SALEM (UPI State lax col Jections for the first two months Crash Kills Young Girl ; REDMOND (UPI Zoa Bur ;dick, 16, Camp Sherman, Ore., -was dead on arrival at a hospital here Friday night after a one-car accident five miles north o Sis--ters. : She was in a car driven by David Moore, 18, Portland, which plunged over an embankment and struck a tree. Moore was not seri ously injured. r "Adultt 1.00 Kids ) m-g-m D MOVED Surf's up and the rifwftcU L FRANKIE AVALON MARIEHE HMEY LLOYD BOCHNER TORIN THATCHER J TO wesowwessr : riflnrtriM rnntniA ituivrrs I II IKI II rlT KMHIUK 'Gen. Adm. 90c Kidi 12 L BARM Presents iuiusim iiujiiiuw niiiiuuv yy f MaLONe-AvaiPN-FUNiceiio JJaV JTv UWIBS TERRORS - fri j OF THE HIGHWAYS , . . , He mw them , ! Ml'Illl , ' what no man ? !T?5l Lowwssth t eve gave . 'M enemy she ; them talote! ' 1 mi would new 1h6 ii swiendef lol Possessed He CJutsldefl HA ROBERT STACK I POLLY BERGEN I JOAN CRAWFORD I JANiS PAIGE narii.niiii vuie nnni'Tfiii-iifi umt nil in i V3nVlLiJMSC0NSUm KWSHABW HUCUfJTmRKffl WAKmWU SICUIoBWIWM .HENRY H GREENBERG 5w iof the current bicnnium totaled B21.5 million, the Legislative In terim Committee on Taxation was told Saturday. Tax Commission economist George Pederson said the July- Auaust receipts were up 4.53 per cent over the same period last year, but were in line witn esti mates given the 1963 Legislature. Pederson said that during liscal 1962-63 seven Oregonians reported incomes of over $1 million. He snir! there were no million dollar Ipersonal returns in the previous year. Finsnre Director Freeman 'Holmer told the committee that I if the people turn down the legis- DOORS -V I 8iT floUt! (Under 12) 50c dolphin Gates Open 7:15 Show At Dusk! OVER! Beach is really swinging! nnn fl till It PL' 17 DUO vUlllllllllUO L lit In H nlr MM V'JTl PmUXMH.mtmOH' AN AMERICAN . ' INTIftNATIONAL , ' 'j V - 14 35c Under 12 Free ni umih: w!rin-jiiYPri'K; tunra Oregon lature's lax increase measure, the state will be about 138 million short nf mpplinff its bills under the budcet. A special reterenoum election will be held Oct. 15. Ha said if the tax measure Is defeated, all budgets, including money given to local school dis tricts lor property tax reiiei, unuM havo tn be Cut from 11 to 14 per cent to keep the budget balanced.. H,Jmr saiH the stale ended the 1961-63 biennium with a $6 million surplus. He stressed that there isn't any "huge surplus" in the state gen eral funds as some persons ap parently believe. Hp snifl the tax bill passed by the 1963 Legislature would raise an additional J63.5 minion, ana that fieure anticipates a growth in the state's economy. in Hisi-uKsins budcet controls, Holmer said there is a $7 to $8 million cost for servicing state bonds which can't be reduced and that his department hasn t any control over expenditures of the state's courts and departments which are set up unaer me siaie constitution. He also said that defeat of the lax measure would cut the state's intprost parninCK nn funds that are collected but not used until the bills come due. Pederson said that, the effect of Mm rpppnt lnmhpi- strike nn state lax collections will apparently be nominal. He said there could be a long range effect because of possible plant modernization to eliminate some iobs and close some of the less profitable mills. Stocks Climb To New High During Week NEW YOflK (UPII Financial observers suw history made last week when both the popular mar ket averages Dow-Jones in dustrials and Standard & Poor's 500 slock rose to record highs. History was made too, when a 3!HS,000-share block of Sperry Band was traded on Friday, the largest single block ever traded in the regular way. Standard & Poor's Index, afler llie Labor Day holiday, bounced back on Tuesday lo a new record high of 72.66. The index closed the week at 72.84, up 0.39. Standard's 500 slock index Is said to represent 86 per cent of j the market value of all common stocks listed on the "big board, The previous closing high was 72.64 recorded on Dec. 13, 1961. Dow-Jones industrials closed at 737.983.07 higher than its prev ious record of 734.91 sel on Dec. 13, 1961. The new high contrasted with a 19ta low of 535.76, reached during the sharp break in May and Juno last year. Dow-Jones in dustrials finished the week at 735.37, up 6.05. Volume on Friday swelled tol 7.160.000 shares heaviest since Iho 10.706,970 of May 31, 1962, Thursday of the infamous week the slock market broke. A larao portion of total volume was accounted (or by Sperry Hand which racked up a total of 615,500 shares on Friday and 1,350,000 for the week. Starts TODAY! - CONTINUOUS ROM 11:45 imkiihcj BWMIt M'WjnTj 'SSCHALL BARUEIT-SS, Totals Listed In Possible School Cuts SALEM (UPU-An 11 per cent cutback in the basic echool allot ment would total $15,588,332 for the 1963-65 biennium, Public In struction Supt. Leon P. Minear advised. In addition, special programs would be cut back $645,040. The cuts outlined by Minear do not include community college ap propriations. Gov. Mark Hatfield has asked an attorney general's ruling on whether he has authority to make cuts in the basic school allotment. If Hatfield has the authority, there are indications he may not call a special session of the legis lature if the $60 million tax in crease measure is defeated at the Oct. 15 referendum election. Program cutbacks listed by Minear are $294,140 for handi capped children. $275,440 for men tally retarded children, $55,000 for gifted children, $14,960 for curricu lum improvement, and $5,500 for migrant children summer school program. The basic school cuts for the 1963-64 school year would total $7.3 million. Larger cuts would be necessary for the 1964-65 school year, Minear said. The county by county list of cuts for the current school year: Baker $52,914, Benton $191,173, Clackamas $589,466, Clatsop $84,. 0112, Columbia $84,132, Coos $285, 932. Crook $45,433, Curry $54,516, Dcschules $128,735. Douglas $304,- 948. Gilliam $10,537, Grant $32,136. Harney $29,213, Hood River $69, 928, Jackson $357,592, Jefferson $38,933, Josephine $148,493, tyam ath $182,940. Lake $25,499, Lane $840,183, Lin coln $80,937, Linn $243,717, Mal heur $111,481, Marion $562,018. Morrow $16,837, Multnomah $1 447,221, Polk $100,445, Sherman $12,647, Tillamook $72,045, Uma tilla $162,847. Union $89,324, Wallowa $24,477, Wasco $93,826, Washington $562, 204, Wheeler $8,583, Yamhill $155,- 070. 'Space Ice1 Hits Russia MOSCOW 'LTD -An 11-pound chunk of ice which fell on near by Domodcdovo a few days ago might have come from space, the Soviet news agency Tass said to dy. "There are grounds to believe that tills ice is of space origin," Tass said. "Science, it is true, does not know any precedent. But theoretically a meteor body of ice can exist in space." It said astronomers, geochem ists, glaciologisls and other spec ialists are trying lo solve the mystery of the chunk of ice, which weighed about 11 pounds and splintered on hilling the earth. They believe "it is absolutely impossible lor the ice that fell in Domodcdovo to be of atmos pheric origin; clear sunny weath er prevailed on that day in that area." Tass said. "The hypothe sis that this ice fell off a plane lying at a great height is also rejected." Tass said the ice will be sub jected lo a complicated analysis wilh the use of isolopcs. Elderly Gent Still Tough KANSAS CITY. Mo. i I Pl -Henry J. Gray, who was 100 in April, showed an undaunted spirit today. Attacked by three Negro (eon agers. two of them armed wilh pistols, Gray put up lively, al though brief, resistance. "1 fight them, hut there wore loo manv of them," Gray told detectives. He said the youths knocked him down, sat on him. struck him on the head and mouth with the pistols, tixik his billfold with $4. and ripped olf his trousers. However. Gray refused to go to a hospital for treatment. He lokl detectives he was lough enough lo stand a "little" fight. Detective Kelvin Oamerer com mented: "We wauled to take him to tlie hospital, but lo do so 1 guess we would have had lo fight him. Ktimath Pill. OrtfM Putmintrt diitv !! Sat 1 and 1(!if Strvlna Stulhirn Ortean and Northtrn Callfrnia br Klamath PHthis Campany va n t Fpianart Pfttn TUxadft 41111 W B. lwHand. Pubhlhar nlartd at acad-:iat matttr t tM 0lt ' K imm Pali. Offoon. an Aut"l ' "r Cw" ar.t, Marth X Sftofl-cta po' at P' Kiamattt Paiu. Ortten, and at additional mailine tHictit t Manth Ml MmIM , I Vaar tM Malt t Advance I Mem ... Ml 4 Manllw . 1 Vaar ' Carnar and Dtalert Witi'Jay. Cwt. Iwfidavi Cty 1M UNITtO tKTtKNATtONAl AUDIT tUHIAU OP CIRCULATION tufetcrtfeart nt rtcaivina daiivary el Ittflr HtraM end Nt. llMM TURaoe Mill fctftre t CAMPAIGN LEADERS Dick Green (left) and Paul Meier are the two men who held this year's United Fund campaign here. Green is president of United Fund, while Meier is campaign chairman. Green, Meier United Fund Editor's Note This is the first in a series of biographical sketches on the 3 men and women who head the United Fund campaign In Klamath County this year. They are Ihe 11 division chairmen plus the campaign chairman and the United Fund president. The sc ries starts today with Paul Mel er, campaign chairman, and Dick Green, fund president. Paul Meier and Dick Green, both veteran campaigners for United Fund in this area, this year spearhead the drive to raise $148,311. As president of the United Fund board of directors, Green has the responsibility of seeing lo the business of the organiza tion which backs 24 diiierent charities, plus having overall di rection of Ihe collection of t h e donations. Green has been active in Unit ed Fund work here for six years. He has served on the budget committee, plus put in regular stints as a member ol the board of directors. He look over as president last February Outside of his work with Die fund, Green is manager of televi sion station KOT1. a post he has held for the past seven years Green and his wife, Gretchen have Iwo children, Michael, 3. and (Catherine, 6. The family. lives at 161 Dahlia Street. Meier, as campaign chairman, is responsible for the fund-raising efforts of tlie United Fund. He directs a corps of hundreds of Court Records DISTRICT COURT Aug. 27, 1U3 TRAFFIC CASES Calvin Brflfjo. driving whllft oneratnr'i llcenst suipanded, trial without lurv. found guilty, SS0 flna nald nd opera tor license luspended lor ana additional year. Charles Edward O'Keefe, violation baiic rule, plea of guilty. Hi tine paid. William Henry Perkins, operating haz ardous equipment, plea ol flu illy, S'.SO tina paid. n Carl Wert i, overwidth (9'). plea oi gumv, us tine paid. Geneva Wingtield Martin, disobeyed siop ngn, Hi bail forfeited. MISDEMEANOR Jack Clam Wilson, tieing Intoxicated upon a public highway trial wilhoul lurv. tound guilty, SM) tine paid. Rohert 'eland McAvov, vaqrancy, plea ol guilty, IS ddvs m county al. Aug. If, 161 TRAFFIC CASES Sherd Rakhila Duncan, operating molor vehicle whua driving privileges were suspended, not guilty plea, I without lury set tor Autj, 00. James Russell Oswalt, disobeyed stop sign, guilty plea. S10 line paid. William Francis Horsewood, violate basic rule, lib bail torteited- bien Allan Pclervon, violate basic rule, guilty plea, 110 fine paid. David Man! red Wall work, disobeyed ttoo sign, guilty plea, M tina paid. Alice Jeanne Don, violate basic rule, guilty plea, t'O tine paid. Emil Martin Korbuh. following loo close (car), guilty piaa. $ W tine pad Francis Ray Snyder, violate basic rule, guilty plea. 1S hna p,d. James Rose Vleira. 2010 Ih. group al overload (logs), guilty plea, 2Q (in paid Olga L angle v. Imuropar passing, g ly plea. 110 tina raid. Jama Robert Raiuh, no safety ehai guilty plea. HO tine oad. Clatenta Oliver Santtmit, .1.100 lb group axle overload (logs). guHty plea, $ (ma pain. Norman A. Hutchinson, J00O lb. com tarnation overman uymber and mm gies), guilty plea. W0 tint paid. MISDEMEANOR CASES Bruit Dona'd Huttman. minor In po1 esnn et akohoi.c t.ruior. guilty plea. iii fin pani. and 15 oavft In county tail sw:ended on condition obey ail liquor laws during minority Marllvrt Ann Moort, no angling I cente. guilty pita, tn tine raid. Harry Phili p prunatlf - P'it larcen- not on i It v plra, tnal without lury tor Seot 4 Helen Hemic t Solf. angling prohibit ed methods, ouiitv pin v tint paid FELONY CASES Gertrude Leah Harven. assault wth a dangerous waaoon, praiirninary hearing hld; Insufficient evidence to hole) to an swer charge. Reienseo Cui-k-Cut ScUHRttSTH Spearhead Organization volunteer workers through 11 divi sion chairmen. He is a five-year veteran of United Fund work here, having served as a division chairman for several years. Meier has been dean of instruc tion at Oregon Technical Institute for four years. He and his wife, Bertha, have a married son, Steve, who is a metallurgical en gineer at the Gary, lnd., plant of U.S. Steel. HERALD AND TV Beauty Dies After Operation HOLLYWOOD (UPD - Rosary will be recited Monday night for Spanish-born actress-singer Mar garita Sierra, vivacious "Cha-Cha O'Brien" of television's "Surfside 6" series. The rosary will be in the chap - el of Cunningham & O'Connor Mortuary here and will be fol lowed Tuesday morning by a Requiem Mass at St. Cyril's Church in nearby Encino. Miss Sierra died Friday in St. Vincent's Hospital, where she un derwent delicate heart surgery Thursday. Miss Sierra often was com pared with Carmen Miranda and Lupe Velez, Latin lovelies who were movie stars during the late 1930s and 1940s. But I am not like either of them," she told a UPI reporter in New York several months ago. Carmen Miranda wore all sorts of funny hairdresses, some made of bananas, and I have never done that. Miss Velez, or) the screen, was a spitfire type while I prefer happy-go-lucky parts." The beautiful, 25-year-old sing er-actress longed to win recog nition as a serious singer and had partially achieved her goal in ap pearances at Hollywood Bowl and in nightclubs in most of the ma jor cities in America. However, in lale years, she confined her activities lo televis ion, where she rose to stardom. Four months ago Miss Sierra, who made her home in Encino with her mother, Maria Virginia Sierra, learned that her heart had developed a damaged valve. She rested several months to gain strength for the operation. PAGE J A T Keep the home ties alive with daily news from home Send the Herald and News to your dgihter or son at college... f hcey'U appre-ciate to. JiMt rrftfll your cluck with your damghtw er ten'i w&Vrt So (to A. raid end Newi, P. O. Bex $41, Klcyna Mfe WM d eUs. rcr, egd yoBr ituderff will hevi ell th news arftty dty. t fcfet phone, TU 4-8111, er drep in the efj, MODI (lyfcmta OB yeO prefer. Meil r$ei: 1 fcftnth $1.75 6 Monjtfj$i0.ffl NEWS, Klamath Falls, Ore. U.S., Canadian Talks Show 'Great Progress' WASHINGTON (UPD - Canadi an External Affairs Minister Paul Martin reported Friday "very great progress" in U.S. -Canadian talks on the dollars and cents as pects of the long-deadlocked Col- iumbia River Treaty Martin, accompanied by British Tiny Nation Joins Pact SAN MARINO lUPD - This) tiny 38-square-mile republic de cided Friday to become a party to the limited nuclear test ban treaty. The biggest weapon in San Ma rino is a rusty cannon that hasn't been fired in more than 300 years. Tlie republic's "Grand and Gen eral Council" passed a resolution stating that its signature on the treaty would have "a moral and symbolic value." San Marino claims to lie the oldest nation in Europe. It is sur rounded by Italy. Farmers! Loggers! Bulk Gasoline Competitive Prices and S&H Green Stamps TANKS AVAILABLE Cliff Yaden's SERVICE 2560 So. 6th TU 2-7201 OPEN 24 HOURS Sunday, September I, 1963 Columbia and B.C. hydro officials, met with high-ranking U.S. offi cials to discuss the price the Uni ted States would be willing to pay for British Columbia's share of the added power produced under the joint Columbia River Development plan. It was the first time since the government of Prime Minister Lester B. Pearson took office that the crui'ial subject of price had been tackled by the two countries. ..Martin told a news conference that a protocol spelling out clari fication and changes which Cana da wants before ratifying the more-than two-year-old treaty is "close to finalizalion." "It ' was a useful meeting, " Martin said. "We did not expect it to be the final meeting. We will have more meetings inevitably. But it was a useful meeting and we niade decided progress. DENTAL PLATES Repaired, etc. Our convtnitnt, ha n d y, practical, ond economical services NOW available. - No appointment needed. Xo delav - no wilting :y Credit hvfnlnc by rtqnest OPiN 9:00 - 5:00 1033 Main St. TU 4-3214