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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 15, 1963)
GOP Governors Form To Defeat Democrats DENVER (UPD- Twelve Re publican governors, marshalling their forces with a cautious opti mism about the 1964 elections, gathered Saturday to form an or ganization dedicated to Demo cratic defeat. The stato executives Nelson .'Rockefeller of New York among them went behind closed doors -at the Brown Palace Hotel to or ganize .the Republican Governors association and hear sj.-'Jies by qierty leaders. There was little plication what was going on, but spokesman assured newsmen it ntjs a "very friendly" session. -Step. William E. Miller, N.Y., jOfe Republican national chair man, said some policy statements triight be issued later in the day. -Gov. William Scrantxm of Penn sylvania, talking to newsmen at a recess, said no personalities were discussed at the meeting. Both Scran ton and Rockefeller have been mentioned frequently as potential candidates lor Pros 'dent, but Scranton made an effort Planes Hif, three Lost i TRAVIS AFB. Calif. (UPD-A fivjng-tank was recovered from the 'pacific where a search was cen- tered for two Air Force aircraft 'believed to have collided in flight. -The planes carried a total of three men. ;'-7he Coast Guard said the tank, Jepnd 100 miles northwest of San Cancisco, apparently was from a T33 trainer that was flying in ylpse formation with an F102 jet .when it disappeared from radar screens shortly before midnight: ;Friday night ;"The trainer carried two men, Jhe FHB one. --Shortly after the planes dlsap- 'psared, flares were reported over She water. An official said all but Me or two of these flares were popped by Coast Guard search JIines seeking to Illuminate the I : About a dozen Coast Guard, Air, Torco and Navy planes, four Coast Guard vessels and eight merchant ships participated in the search. Dense fog cleared during the morning. r Kvwr Llvad Bioomii . Ivor I1) I mod I MUTINY ON THE BOUNTY MUKOU Kllllt IDT . fILMCO IN ULTRA PANAVIttON TO TECHNICOlOfJ' OTAS l' WEDNESDAY ' "BEST AMERICAN ILL AN UNUSUAL L kt :. LOVE STORY I U V jC i twto v T ' l '. WNNfUl i-; . -umuMf A jKewDuiwa -iir V" Janet Mahooiim -tMUMSnmr ,;v JMowaoDaSh.vam . .. ,. i -DAV1D A UA" . ' a iHE m m minimum., j v 4 eooti'OHWIHI PAJpiCft ALLEN wwU'ttu-)Mt1WU to dismiss such rumors about himself. 'Not Interested' "I've made it very clear I'm not interested," he said. In response to a question, he said he believed a governor could win the nomination. "At least one is interested," he said in an ap parent reference to Rockefeller. The Now York governor, con sidered very likely to be in t h e thick of the race, has refused to confirm or deny the reports. Another Republican governor considered a potential candidate, George Bomncy ol Michigan, was one of four governors who did not attend Saturday s meeting. Miller, who also held a news conference, declined to comment about a possible convention battle between ItockeleJler end ben, Barry Goldwater, Ariz. "It is a decision I would leave up to them," he said. Miller said he advised the gov. ernors Saturday to tell residents of their states the background of reclamation projects President Kennedy will dedicate on a trip to the West late tills month. The GOP chairman said many of the projects Kennedy will visit were started during the Eisenhower Administration. - Denies 'Non-Political' He said the trip has been called "non-political" but Kennedy "just happens to be visiting states he lost in 1960 and where there arc Senate races in 1964." Sen. Thruston Morton, Ky the Republican senatorial campaign chairman, also was at the meeting and is another potential candidate. But Morton laughed at the reports about him and called them "mild echoes from the hills, I suppose, very mild, which I continue to disavow." Morton outlined for the gover nors the senatorial races in their states lor next year. He said there are eight states with Re publican incumbent governors where the party faces difficult Senate races Maine, Michigan Montana, Ohio, Oklahoma, Rhode Island, Utah and Wyoming. Plan First Meet MALIN Malin Parent and Pa trons will hold its first fall meet' ing on Sept. 17 at 8 p.m. in the elementary school. A teachers' reception and brief business scs sion is planned.. Refreshments1 will be served before the meet Ing by high school room mothers The public is invited. . , ' Surf riding has been a popu lor sport in Hawaii for more than ,000 years. f 1 NEWMAN HUD! smmixmr MELVYN DOUGLAS -NEAL -de WILDE NWIM ft:.,!. win.li MH5UI1- t PUUdXHI nuist Plus "MERRILL'S MARAUDERS" Starts TODAY! FILM OF 1962!" Time Magazine da I I f raw. PAGE JA HERALD AND r ' ACCESS ROAD BEING CUT This power shovel and bulldozer are cutting a short road adjacent to the "A" Canal near the intake at Link River so that crews from the Klamath Irrigation District may have easy access to the canal for repair jobs. They have found in the pest that access is difficult because, of t h e steep canal banks. The road will be about 500 yards long. Thieves Gef $150,000 In Jewelry FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (UPD A band of precision ban dits vanished among thousands of weekend boaters Saturday with "a million places to go" and an estimated $150,000 in jewels stolen commando - style from a store here. Behind them, the men believed to number four left tew clues for police and the FBI, and a woman clerk who still gasped: "I thought they were from outer space." The men made their getaway from the clockwork-smooth rob bery in a stolen car and a speed boat. They were believed last seen roaring under a causeway in Mi- ami, about 20 miles south of here No Trace An all night search of boat- launching ramps turned up only the first of thousands of early rising weekend fishermen. By daylight, the roads were crowded with sportsmen pulling boats on trailers, and scores oi llo craft matched the description of the blue and while outboard believed used by the robbers. "They've got a million places to go. We're cliccking the water ways, but we don t nave mucli o go on, a police .spokesman said. Police estimated the loot at "in the neighborhood of $150,000." ( OPENS TODAY MM , ftat new Gadget's On com i cxu""cnis tmi the motion picture that DARES to portray our MORALS as they really ore... I CEOyour The following conditions filiH H tllf tl IUII ttlMUM HI tlllilil )l Mtfl 1 1 MUM NEWS, Klamath Falls, Ortgoa X X U-' tf5 3ac-w- Madame Nhu Claims UN Check BELGRADE (UPD-Soulh Viet Nam's Mme. Ngo Duih Nhu said Saturday she would personally welcome a United Nations investi gation into her government's dis pule with Buddhist leaders. Viet Nam has nothing to hide," she said. "It is in our in tercst to tell the truth." But she said she doubts most U.N. members would support such an investigation because they do not want similar investi gations of their own internal af fairs. " Mme. Nhu said President Ken nedy and the "whole American SUNDAY WWl BARRACKS 925 and La dies Aux., district meeting, Bend. GEM AND ARTDMCTS SHOW 10 a.m. to 8 p.m., National Guard Armory, Shasta Way. KLAMATH CO. HISTORICAL SOCIETY, 2:30 p.m., no host luncheon, Satellite Restaurant Kingsloy Field tour. MONDAY NEIGHBORS OF WOODCRAFT 8 p.m., meeting. KC ll.ill. BETHEL 61. Job's Daughters, 7:30 p.m., meeting, Scottish Rite Temple. Y-NK-MA TWIRLERS, 7:30 p.m., beginning square dance in' slruction, YMCA, Pine St. GREAT BOOKS DISCUSSION GROUP, 7:30 p.m. City Library basement. FLOWER SHOW SCHOOL. ! a.m. In 3 p.m., Klamath Auditor mm with registration beginning at 8 a.m. THKTA TIIETA HMO OIKUS CLUB, 7 p.m., meeting, lOOF Hull. STARTS WEDNESDAY NOT foryl must b mat to set this: ; (Community. i dalendar ; Qt HD tJEDWI'CnmD i CD' orinroxB i .tx.j i inn,: .aD, iicinri'.iinxa' QjilUJ'i m CTMliXtrtTXII Sunday, September 15, 1963 1 Welcome public" were misinformed about South Viet Nam. Madame Nhu, whose husband is the controversial "strongman" of the Saigon government, spent almost two hours Friday explain ing her country and her govern ment to Sen. Edward M. Kenne dy, D-Mass., President Kerne dy's youngest brother. They met at lunch. Both are delegates to the 59-na lion Inter - Parliamentary Un ion (IPU) conference now under way here. The sister-in-law of South Viet namese President Ngo Dinh Diem repeated her claim that "false press reports" are to blame for American criticism of the Saigon regime. "It is not only President Ken nedy who is misinformed but the whole American public," Mme. Nhu told a news conference, cut ting the air with her diamond and pearl ringed hand. Asked about President Ken nedy's statement expressing con fidence in American represent lives in South Viet Nam and his praise of Ambassador Henry Ca bot Lodge, Mme. Nhu said, "1 think it was very adroit." "Lodge, since he has rcached Saigon, seems to have become more Asidn than the Asians," she added. Why? Because Lodge has be come terribly mysterious. Her eyes flashed in anger when nsked about 'suggestions in the U.S. Senate that aid to South Viet Nam be reduced or cut off 'Why, why. why? Why now, of all times?" she said. c arc so near to victory lover Communist guerilla forcesl Do they not understand that? "To stop their aid now when victory is at hand would seal the fale of the United States, she said. She said "yes" when asked if she meant a stoppage of Ameri can aid now would mean a Com munist victory in her Southeast Asian homeland. D7k Soviet Ambassador Visits With Rusk WASHINGTON (UP1 Soviet Ambassador Anatoly S. Dobrynin. in apparently jovial mood, met with Secretary of State Dean Rusk Saturday, as the United Stales prepared for a major new round of probing Soviet intentions dur ing the coming weeks. The Soviet envoy's 20-minutc call to the State Department re flected the current relaxation oi tension that has prevailed between Washington and Moscow since the signing of the nuclear test ban treaty a month ago. How deep this mood of concil iation goes and whctlter it will lead to further concrete agree ments is what Hie Kennedy ad ministration hopes to find out in talks in New York during the United Nations General .s---embly which opens this week and In later talks in Washington. frral&anb Stiff PaklllllM HV ! ! 1U? j S.rvln S.uth.rn Ortfl 1 and Nvthlrn California i r a Klamalk Pakllinmt Camunr Ma' a Eeiand PMM TUtM Mill w. ft. iwtttian.. vMhar ntaratf aa ttc-lata mattar at ta toil lc al Klamam am. Oraoon. an a la. ina. wHtar k 1 Ca frao, March X lira iaca-cla. Mat it aia at Klamath Pali. Oratwt anal at aMinanal mami atticaat Carriar I Maxtk t n aManiM lit.tt I Vaar Ul.aa Mall M MvaMt l Ma.t Iltl 4 Mmha aiaaa I Vaar lll.al Carriar a4 oaaiara , Wn.ar, Or, I at Swrrtar, CMT lac VNITIO 'Mil I MTU NATIONAL UDIT aUMAU Of CIRCULATION twacrttara mi rvc.tvmf ..(vary at tkav NaraM a. N.aa. ataat. aJaaM TUiaaM Mill Mart f a.m. Young Sailor Survives NEW YORK (UPI) "Some thing white" in the waves, Frans Maria Stareharezyk s waving un dershirt, caught the eye of a searcher on the Coast Guard cutter Absecon. The German sail or had siient 15 hours, most of them nude, in the stormy mid Atlantic. The survival was termed "mi raculous" in itself, but the plucky 26-year-old seaman, third engi neer of the freighter Freiburg, still had enough energy to. clam- Engle Still Critically III In Hospital WASHINGTON (UPI) - The brother of Sen. Clair B. . Engle flew here Saturday to join a round-the-clock vigil at the bed side of the criticajly ill Califor nia Democrat. Fred Engle Jr., a Sacramento, Calif., stale official, arrived early Saturday and wpnt almost im mediately to nearby Bethesda, Md., Naval hospital. The Senator is there suffering malignant brain tumor that has resulted in partial loss of speech and partial paralysis, it was learned. Sources said there appeared to be no changc'ih Engle's condition Saturday. They said Friday lie was in . "very bad shape" al though the Senator's office said his condition was not oritical and that he was slowly improving. Engle underwent brain surgery Aug. 24 after extensive hospital tests. There was no disclosure of the operation until three days later. On Aug. 27, in response to! queries, the senator's aides con firmed that the operation had taken place and said it was to correct a circulatory, ailment. A statement by Engle's doctor the same day said "there was no tumor and no indication of ma lignancy." The doctor also said at the time that Engle probably would be allowed to go home in a week to 10 days to convalesce. However, Engle's condition ap parently worsened and sources close to the Senator said Friday that subsequent examinations showed he was suffering from an inoperable malignant brain tumor., A terse statement issued Fri day by Engle's office following numerous queries said he was not in critical condition" and was improving slowly. It said the1 complex nature of his condition makes it impossible for the con sulting doctors to make a defi nite prognosis at this time." Home Wine Law Noted Persons intending to produce I wine for family use must' notify j the federal government at least five days before beginning produc tion: otherwise, such wine is sub ject to tax and seizure and the maker is liable to criminal ac tion, the Internal Revenue Service at Portland disclosed today. As much as 200 gallons of wine may be produced annually for family use without payment n tax, providing the wine-maker is the head of a family. Forms for giving notice of home wine production may be obtained in this area from the Alcohol and Tobacco Tax Division. Room 225, U.S. Court House, Portland. The two discussed briefly the timetable for meetings between Rusk and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko during the U N. session that opens Tuesday. President Kennedy, who will address the United Nations Fri day also expects to meet with Gromyko probably in .Washington. Husk, in a major policy smoti in Miami Beach this week, liste l seven broad areas in which he said the United States was ready to negotiate agreements with Rus sia In follow up the "first step" the conclusion of the test ban. Shop Today 10 TILL 7 Ac Store No. '2 South 6th & Shosto Woy OPEN TILL MIDNIGHT Monday thru' Sat. All Grocery Specials from last Thurs. ad good thru Wednesday! MARKET . BASKET fth tjnd Pin So. 4th mnd Shut Wy bcr up a cargo net of the Abse con. Then he collapsed. It was 10 p.m. EDT Thursday, and the Freiburg was 810 miles northeast of Bermuda, when Stareharezyk strolled on deck to take a breather from a poker game. He was clad only in the shirt and undershorts. The ship suddenly pitched 1p heavy seas and Stareharezyk plummeted overboard in the darkijess. No one knew he was gone, and his freighter steamed on. . Saturday he said: "I think the 12th was my unlucky day because 1 lost all my money playing poker and fell over the side, but Friday the 13th was my lucky day because you ( the Coast Guard) picked me up." Credits Stamina Cmdr. Jack E. Forrester, com manding officer of the Absecon, discounted luck. Starcharczyk's stamina and presence of mind were mainly responsible, he said. The sailor had no life preserver-. The husky bachelor, an excel lent swimmer, told his rescuers he conserved energy by doing very little swimming." Aside from sunburn and salt exposure. his condition was described as "excellent." But harrowing moments , filled the 15 hour ordeal, lasting through Thursday night and part of Friday. Turbulent waves and 30-milc-an-hour winds lashed the man. He became frightened and, he told rescuers, prayed liberally. "The pilot fish began to snapi at my underwear," he said, "So I took it off. This gave tnem oniy bare skin to snap at." He kept the undershirt, to signal. Truck Crash Claims Life SAN BERNARDINO, Calif UPD A five-axle semi-truck and trailer apparently lost its brakesj on a downhill grade on U.S. i'M and crashed into an abutment about 20 miles northwest of here. killing one of the two Alabama drivers aboard. Clifford Martin, 35, Jopa, Ala., burned to death in the wreckage. The California Highway Patrol said he was in the sleeping com partment of the rig at the time of the accident. Driver at the time, James Al bl ight, 33, Jopa, was taken to San Bernardino hospital wnere nis condition was listed as extreme ly critical. Officers said the truck was loaded with cantaloupes that had been picked up at Mendota. Calif. They said the truck was bound for Cullman, Ala. Owner of the truck was listed as the Cullman Bana Supply Co of Cullman. Special introductory terms this week only Just dial SUPER wash and diapers and other "problem" washes get extra "scrubbing" automatically. No need to reset the washer or put in additional detergent. Four more cycles . . . normal, ckntle, super wash 'S wear and wash 'n wear . . . wash every load sparkling clean with exclusive Surgilator agitator washing action. Additional better-washing features include t Exclusive Magic-Mix dispenser filter that adds detergent, filters out lint automatically Five wash-rinse combinations that give all fabrics the special care they need Three water levels, so you save water when doing partial loads, ink. v Uta at traa.marhi tin a.a tCA ay Whirl.a Cataa'at.oft, iwanutadwar at l(A WHtti'OOL aaaancat. vthariiaa' ay 1.41. Carpa.ai.oft at An.re. Other Deluxe 250 From FACTORY TRAINED APPLIANCE mi. Mm aw I ,jCktarCf LAI U l trwfl 15-Hour Ordeal In Sea Thought Of Suicide "I was afraid the pilot fish would bring stiarks, and I thought about suicide. I thought about choking myself with the under wear but this would be too slow. Then I thought maybe I would bite my wrist vein ... but then I just swam and swam ... "I thought the sharks would come any time." " Starcharczyk's absence was dis covered on the Freiburg at mid night Thursday, when he was scheduled to go on a work shift. The "man overboard" signal went out on the radio and the freighter reversed its course to search for him. Hoffa Announces Drive For Nationwide Contract CHICAGO (UPI I - Teamsters President James R. Holla has announced a drive for a nation wide trucking contract under the threat -of spreading "pickets across the country." There'll be no more local. state . or area level contracts, Hoffa told the ninth meeting of the Teamsters' general executive board. Hoffa ordered notices sent to 16,000 trucking companies and asked for new contract talks cov ering 450,000 members of the un ion's central and southern cooler- ences. Contracts with these firms expire Feb. 1. ' A Hoffa aide said trucking firms that have dealt with the Teamsters' Eastern and Western conferences would be asked to participate in the bargaining and accept any terms reached with the Central and Southern confer ences. Hoffa called on local unions to cooperate in demanding one agreement in over-the-road truck ing, nty drivers, dock workers, mechanics and clerks. Hoffa told the 600 applauding delegates the lead toward a na tional agreement was taken by the trucking industry itself, which he said had tended to lorm na tional work practices and rates and to increase consolidations ol companies. The trend, he said, has made it increasingly difficult for local Models Full MARCHA "c!" I 5:1.1 A R:fl0 I 1 I Ull.-lnmlu f-'unnv t CARRY ON TEAl'HtR I TWO FOR THE SKEJJAW M Size At Low A Week Park On Our Own Big Free RADIO & ELECTRI lit taartk fck Ml TU i Atwan rtaaT at rM Fart.if About 2 a.m. the Freiburg passed Stareharezyk in the dark ness. "I shouted and shouted but she went away," he said. The Absecon, 120 miles away, steamed to the scene and arrived at 7 a.m. The Freiburg then left. It was 12:04 p.m. Friday when the Absecond sighted the franti cally waved undershirt in the waves. Two minutes later Star eharezyk was aboard. Early to day the Absecon rendezvouzed with the Freiburg and returned its man. The freighter, a Hamburg American Line ship, then re sumed its journey, from Tampico, Mexico to Antwerp, Belgium. unions to deal effectively with the industry. American labor faces "the fight of its lite" against a government "which controls you from birth to death," Hoffa said. v The Teamsters head called for more political action within the union than ever before and re newed his plea for the defeat of anti-labor congressmen. Hoffa singled nut Sen. Pat Mc Namara, D-.Mich., as "a man who cares less about labor than any other senator there." Hoffa unleashed a podium pounding attack on Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy. The two have been feuding ever since Kennedy launched an intensive investiga tion much of it here in Chi cago when he was chief coun sel of the Senate Rackets Com mittee in the late 1950s. Hoffa said the United States was being run by "a police force directed by Bobby Kennedy and if you disagree with him you are in trouble." DENTAL PLATES Repaired, etc. Our convenient, ha a y, practical, end economical services NOW available. No appointment needed. 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