Negro Youth Arrested
In Bombing Of Store
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (UPH-A
food store operated by a white
man in a Negro neighborhood ex.
ploded and burned Wednesday
night during an apparent arson
attempt.
Burned Girl
Still Listed
As Critical
SAN FRANCISCO (UPII-Little
Cathryn Reeves remained on the
critical list at San Francisco
General Hospital today, while au
thorities sought to determine how
.. and why the 8-year-old crippled
' polio victim was set afire.
a Cathryn suffered third degree
burns over 40 per cent of her
body Tuesday evening when her
dress caught fire and she was un
able to run for help because of
r the braces on her logs.
The injured child told police
' that two boys in her special un
i" graded class at Visitation Valley
School threw a book of flaming
, matches at her. She said they
- teased her because of the braces.
'Police questioned three of Cath-
ryn's classmates, including the
. two whom she had named. Au-
thorities said the youngsters,
ranging in age from 7 to 10, de-
nied throwing the matches.
' "The boys claim she lit them
herself," said police Lt. Dan Ma-
; honey, who added that his inves-
ligation determined that the four
'. children were playing together,
i and that Cathryn evidently had
; the matches.
... Police Inspector Kevin Coriroy
"said all three of (he boys seemed
. confused as to what actually hap
pened. . "I don't think any of them real-
ly knows," Conroy said. "It
appears it might have been acci
dental. We'll talk to the little
. girl later, when her condition
' improves."
'Oinmunitu
a
Caiendc
THURSDAY
. PROSPERITY REBECCA
XODGE. 8 p.m., meeting, 100F
-.Hall. Honoring Past Noble
) Grands.
J', Y-NE-MA TWIRLERS, 8 p.m.,
square dance. St. Paul's educa
, tion building. Bring doughnuts.
VFW AUXILIARY, 8 p.m., busi
ness meeting, VFW Hall.,
' 1VES1.EYAN SERVICE GUILD,
7:30 p m., meeting. Alpha Phelps,
', Mrs. Gladys Adamson, Medford.
BETHEL No. 8, .lobs' Daugll
' ters, 7 p.m., meeting, Masonic
. Temple.
FRIDAY
RUMMAGE SALE. Royal
Neighbors. 8 a m. to 5 pm., old
Reliable Cleaners Bldg. For pick
up call TU 4-5359.
RUMMAGE SALE, Congrega
tional Church. 9:50 a.m. to 4 p.m.,
church, 2154 Garden.
MERRY MIXERS, 8 pm.,
square dance. Merry Mixer Hall.
Bring refreshments.
T1 ALOHA SOCIAL CLUB, OES,
1:45 p.m., meeting, Masonic Tem
ple. CONGER FAIRVIEW HOME
EXT. UNIT. 10 a.m., potlurk. col
or in home lesson, Joan's Kitch
en. RUMMAGE SALE, Manzanita
Social Club, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m..
Masonic Temple, 418 Klamath.
Call TU 4-4221.
YMCA FAMILY NIGHT. 6:30
p.m., potluck. recreation. YMCA.
Bring table service, hot dish, sal
ad or dessert. OTI foreign stu
. dent guests.
RUMMAGE SALE, St. Barna
bas Guild. 12 noon to B p.m., old
Bonanza post office bldg.
SHASTA VIEW GRANGE, 8
p.m., meeting. Grange Hall.
On The Record
DIVOUCI ACTIONS FILED
NICHOLS Jesii Btrmct vl. Oanltl
Harwrt.
PETER ST EINEREdni L. VI. l'r
r.
ROBERTSON Jam Dalt VI. MtryU
COURT 1CTIONS FILED
John Yantil vl. Mri. Howard R. Thur
man. MlRRItOI LICENSES
Wi'ilam Paitr Moranat. M. Mann, and
imia sm.ih. ia. Kiamaih Cam.
Cnarltt R. Caldwtll. 33. Rtdmond. And
Linda Joan L'nvllit. Kiamatn Fam
Gary w Bum. 33. Kiamatn Fall!, and
Rutn Ward, IV. Naw Weitmimtar, Can
da. jnnn Ater,y Maidtra. 39. and LQulia
War,t Hvdlund. 33. bom Kiamain FaHl.
; Court Records
MUNICIPAL COURT
Oct. J. 1HJ
tvn J . AW". IJi Or flvi fit
IS flv S
v S'u'trn tfrurA, IIS r 'v Of
, 1C !)
e io 6i
&tvaf Lui Vinfe. S'yrtfc. $
f,y II dtyi
Vmivy Jkvw, v'fxy, I'OO J
. !v.
jf"H A tv. dry. en,ifl
N!y rnif' UMe'Woofl, drynfc, 173 ftf
iivt of 10 dm.
Police held a Negro youth,
picked up while being treated foi
burns in a hospital emergency
room, on suspicion of arson.
The explosion blew out the front
of the Discount Meat Center, cav
ing in the roof and touching off
flames. Firemen quickly extin
guished the fire, but the store
was a shambles.
A crowd of about 50 Negroes
gathered at the scene in north
east Birmingham but remained
orderly. Police officers, some
carrying submachine guns, sur
rounded the area.
Fire officials said the store was
doused with gasoline from two
five-gallon cans found in the
ruins, and flames from a heater
caused the gasoline fumes to ex
plode. Officers said the Negro youth
jonnny Lewis Kutnn, 20, was
treated for first and second de
gree burns on his left side. He
told police he was burned in a
warehouse fire and flagged down
a motorist who took him to the
University Hospital. Officers said,
however, they learned the youth
caught a taxi in the vicinity of
the store and went home where
relatives drove him to the hos
pital.
Negro leaders, meanwhile, indi
cated dissatisfaction with the
progress of biracial negotiations
aimed at easing racial tension in
this steel city. Dr. Martin Luther
King Jr. and Rev. Fred shutlles-
worth planned a meeting Monday
to decide whether to resume ra
cial demonstrations.
Elsewhere in the nation:
Selma, Ala. Integration lead
ers said Martin Luther Kine
would go there Oct. 15 to bolster
a voter registration-desegregalion
campaign. Negro comedian Dick
Gregory was expected to arrive
t riday. Gregory s wife was given
a $300 fine and a 180-iail sen
tence Wednesday in connection
with racial demonstrations.
Cambridge, Md. Negro lead
er Gloria Richardson said she
would give Cambridge officials a
cooling off period in this city's
battle for a public accommoda
tions law, but would open a sec
ond front against segregation in
schools and industry.
Orangeburg, S. C. Negroes,
failing to gain an agreement
with whites over a conference
table, promised they would renew
massive street demonstrations.
Washington: A Negro voice
was raised today in condemna
tion of street demonstrations and
civil rights militancy. Retired Ar
my Maj. Hughes Alonzo Robin
son. former commandant of
cadets at Fort Valley State Col
lege, a Negro unit of Georgia's
state school system, contends that
self-improvement and not ulti
matums" on desegregation is the
best way to advance the Negro
cause.
Atlanta: An unidentified white
man was beaten to death with
nail-studded slats and set on fire
Wednesday night, police said. Of
ficers said a Negro youth re
ported seeing two Negroes drag
the man from a car.
' Today, there is a totally new" Imperial. Tomorrow, somebody will abk if you've seen it. It is far . more : than a n'ewcar. It isanew' '
, concept of what a fine car should be. The new Imperial is America's most'spacious luxury car! jfis also ;the quietest. If you
admire fine cars, enter the quiet world of Imperial-The Incomparable Imperial for 14. ' y- : )
HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath
ACES TAKE TRICKS FOR CANCER RESEARCH These king size aces symbolize fhe
giant effort being taken by the Klamath Falls Unit Committee of the American Con
tract Bridge League to raise dollars for research against cancer and multiple sclerosis.
Next Sunday, 1:30 p.m., at the Winema Motor Hotel, local duplicate bridge players
will send their dollars into fight against the two dread diseases when they compete
in the unit's annual charity party. All proceeds from the game will go to the two chari
ties. Left to right are Mrs. Bud Cloake. unit committee member; O. K. McCart, local
president American Cancer Society; John Lake, chairman of the tournament.
Mrs. May
Raps Joint
Moon Plan
WASHINGTON (UPI) Rep.
Catherine May, R-Wash., suggest
ed Wednesday the United States
might be sacrificing a military
advantage for a propaganda ad
vantage if it joins the Soviet Un
ion in an attempt to put men on
the moon.
'To be first in propaganda but
second in defense could be fatal,"
Mrs. May said in a newsletter.
The Washington Republican
questioned President Kennedy's
proposal for a joint effort to
reach the moon, saying the Rus
sians could be expected to seek
military control of space while!
"tying up" the United States in
the joint expedition.
The Russians have scored
'spectacular" propaganda victor
ies in their space program over
the years, Mrs. May said. But
during those same years, she
added, the United States had
maintained a lead in the stock
piling of weapons.
"We may bave been second in
propaganda." she said, "but we
were first in defense."
She said she based her doubts
of the wisdom of a joint U.S.
Soviet moon shot on views ex
pressed by Sir Bernard Lovell,
director of Britain's Jodrell bank
experiment station.
Lovell, Mrs. May noted, had ex
pressed belief the Russians had
given up the race to put a man
the moon and were concen
trating instead on the assembly
of a space platform. She said
U.S. military experts had sug
gested such a space platform
could be used to launch nuclear
warheads to targets on the earth.
jfam&M I: MP.E ll A
i -(. ... -. ...... , v .'V' V v.
JIM OLSON MOTORS, INC. O
Falls, Ore.
Thursday,
y. h y.'
Ben Bella Readies Army
To Halt Algerian Revolt
ALGIERS (UPI) Algerian
President Ahmed Ben Bella
warned today that the "counter-
evolution" of Berber rebels
against his regime is a threat
"both to our national unity and
the territorial integrity of our
country."
In a speech to his hand-picked
National Assembly, he demanded
full powers to end the week-old
insurrection centered in the
mountainous Kabylia region about
40 miles east of Algiers.
But he pledged that in using
the army to put down the upris
ing, it would be employed only
against the armed rebels and not
against the civilian population.
"The national people's army
never will be used against the
populations of Kabylia," he said.
The rebellion, led by insurgent
leaders Col. Mohand ou el Hadj
and former Vice premier Hocine
Ait Ahmed, has been bloodless,
Neither side has fired a shot.
Ben Bella informed a special
session of the one-party National
Assembly that he took full powers
under article 59 of the Constitu
tion. No vote on this either was
needed or taken. But the assem
bly unanimously voted approval)
of a motion denouncing the insur
rection. The resolution was introduced
by deputies from the Kabylia
area. It denounced tne action oi
the anti-Ben Bella forces and as
serted there is no "Kabyle prob
lem" The Kahyles are a sepa
rate race apart from the Arabs
October 9, 1983
PAGE 3A
and constitute a minority in Al
geria.
The uprising is aimed at end
ing what the rebels consider Ben
Bella's one-man rule.
Ben Bella, sent his loyal troops
into Tizi Ouzou Wednesday night.
iMiisara'OTssti
86 Proof
IMPtRIAL DIVISION
522 S. Sixth
i
II
DOlEBHU
ii
V 2.1 I fi
Mansfield
Columbia
WASHINGTON (l'PI - Sen
ate majority leader Miko Mans
field expressed optimism today
that ratification of the Columbia
River Treaty by Canada might be
forthcoming in the near future.
The Montana Democrat reject
ed speculation that a victory in
the British Columbia elections
this week for Premier W.A.C. Ben
nett's Social-Credit Party might
hurt chances for ratification.
"I am not discouraged," Mans
field said in an interview.
Among those expressing doubt
that Canada would ratify the
treat" as a result of the Rritish
Fishing Fleet
Funds Voted
WASHINGTON (UPI The
Senate Wednesday approved a $50
million subsidy program to help
American fishermen build new
vessels for "wet war" competition
against huge fleets of Russian
and Japanese trawlers.
Approval came on a 57-14 vote
after defeat of two amendments
that would have sliced the fed
eral support. The measure, which
now goes to the House, would pro
vide up to 55 per cent of the cost
of constructing new fishing boats.
The $10 million-a-ycar program
would run (or five years and
would replace another ship-build
ing subsidy program that expired
July 1. It offered subsidies up to
one-third of the cost of building
the vessels m the United States.
On a standing vote, the Senate
turned down an amendment by
Sen. John Williams. R-Del.. to cut
the amount from $10 million to
(5 million a year.
I
AND
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L
iS CHRYSLER
TO
M0T0P8 COOPORAHON :
Street
Expects Canada To Ratify:
River Treaty In Near Future
Columbia elections was Washing
ton State Conservation Director
Kali Coe. The Washington state
official earlier suggested that the
United States should give up hope
of Canadian ratification and go it
alone on river development.
Bennett, whose party won 31 of
52 seats in the election, has been
at odds with the Canadian federal
government over the treaty for
the joint development of the Co
lumbia River. The U. S. Senate
ratified the treaty in 1961, but the
disagreement betwee n the provin
cial government and Ottawa has
delayed ratification by the Cana-
zn NEW STORE SALE
OnMAL2PAYSi
YES, ONLY 2 MORE DAYS IN WHICH TO SAVE
UP TO 12 ON MANY NEEDED ITEMS. REMEM
BER - NO MONEY DOWN - NO PAY UNTIL FEBi
1964 ON ALL MAJOR APPLIANCES. ;
SHOP AT OUR ANNEX & STORE FRI. TIL 9 ;-
12' x 6' Reg. 86.40 SAVE 46.45 3fc?3VOC
ROOM SIZE RUG 3995
ALL WOOL WILTON NO MONEY DOWN
Reg. 99.95 SAVE 32.07 ff BTfQQ
SOFA BED 6781
DANISH MODERN - STRIPED FABRIC no MONEY DOWN
Reg. 219.95 SAVE $30 Electric 4. f fm. Jf.
AUTOMATIC WASHER $fl89
KENMORE 2-CYCLE - 10-LB. CAPACITY no MONEY DOWN
! Reg. 39.95 SAVE 20.95 rtr
1 ELECTRIC DRYER W)
KENMORE SINGLE CYCLE, 10-LB. CAPACITY N0 MONEY DOWN '
' Reg. 169.95 SAVE 30.95 &3ffl?i I
REFRIGERATOR $2!9
12 CU. FT. 2-DOOR, AUTOMATIC DEFROST no MONEY DOWN I
Reg. 29.95 SAVE 5.95 5 Jl
VACUUM CLEANER $24
CANISTER MODEL WITH ATTACHMENTS no MONEY DOWN
Reg. 7.99 SAVE OVER Vi t QQ
WOMEN'S JACKETS $J '
PLASTIC WITH RAYON LINING. White, Beige, Green
Reg. 7.98 SAVE 3.00 l QQ
MEN'S SWEATERS W9
PULLOVER STYLE. SHETLAND WOOL
Men's Reg. 21.95 SAVE 7.07 1 QQ
ALL WEATHER COAT $Wwt
ZIP-OUT PILE LINING - DARK SHADES
Reg. 229.95 SAVE 32.95 fl V E7
CHAIN SAW $197
26-INCH 7-H.P. GEAR DRIVE no money down
Reconditioned - Guaranteed ( '
LAWN MOWERS ASl- $2fl:
REELS, RIDERS, ROTARIES no money DOWM
Reg. 34.95 SAVE 7.95
COMBINATION DOORS 2 f
30" - 32" - 36" x 80" 1-INCH THICK ALUMINUM
Reg. to 7.99 SAVE ALMOST Vi & ft QQ
BLANKETS
TWIN OR FULL SIZE RAYON-NYLON
SALE PRICED CTIQl
ELECTRIC HAND TOOLS F7
DRILL '4-INCH SABRE SAW WITH ADAPTER
. Open Doily 9:30 - 3:30 '
Shop at Bears and Save Q-n A P C Frl. Till 9 P.M.
$.tu..H.BMG.r.d .r QJjAIVVJ 133 S. 8th TU 2-4481
dian Parliament.
Mansfield said tie was as con
vinced now that the provincial
and federal governments would
get together on the treaty as he
had been before the elections.
Once the elections were held.
Mansfield said, the Canadians
then could "get down to bed
rock" on the problem of the sale
of downstream power benefits.
Under the treaty, the United
States and Canada would work to
gether for further development of
the Columbia River and its trea
ties. Canada would build three
storage dams in British Columbia
and receive cash and power in
exchange for power accruing at
downstream U.S. dams as a re
sult of better river regulation.
The treaty also would make it
possible for the United States to
proceed with full development of
the Libby 'Dam in Jlontana. The
dam would back waters of the
Kootenai River across the border
into Canada.
The treaty provides (or deliv
ery of power to the Canadian
border, but U.S. officials have ex
pressed willingness to help Can
ada market it in the United
States if the Canadians so desire.