Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, October 08, 1963, Page 2, Image 2

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    ,1U
Mrs. Neuberger Cites
Attacks For DAR Stand
WASHINGTON (UP1) - Sen.
Maurim B. Neuberger, D-Ore.,
taid today she had been subjected
to a campaign of "concerted ve
nom" for suggesting withdrawal
of tax exemption for th Daugh
ters of the American Revolution
(DAR).
In a speech prepared for Senate
delivery, Mrs. Neuberger said she
Had been attacked with the impli
cation that she was "a Commu
nist, a party to the 'international
anti-freedom conspiracy.
The implication that she was a
200 Churches
Close In Soviet
MOSCOW (UPD Two liun
' died churches and prayer houses
have been closed in the past three
years in one section of the west
ern Ukraine, the soviet Comma
nist party newspaper Pravda an
nounced Monday.
The closings resulted, Pravda
said, from the "very intensive ed
.ucalion work of the party."
; The area involved was Volynla,
ji district absorbed into the So
viet Union from Poland after
JWorld War n.
:Hunter Remains
Critical Today
: CANYONVIUE, Ore. (UPI) -Howard
Shame!, 49, Grants Pass,
remained in critical condition at
a hospital here today from a gun
shot wound suffered while hunt
ing. Sliamel was accidentally shot in
Ihe stomach by his brother, Louis,
42. while hunting squirrels near
Slendale Sunday.
BSSOB
Doori opm
;4S
Wednesday
Nife Only
(make way
IN YOUR HEART
'.. for the greateit
of all screen
adventured
r
fRCDOlC
SPENanTRACY
MXDUOAS
-I
I "TOWER OF
i r
S t LL I m lit
k JVA Dromo fo to9
W J jSI eryou...and
jlU' o soul-thrill
ksapinmamoryl
fSlSW VICTOR
FLEMING
V
" Ends
Tonite
- 55
Days To
Peking
; Stdrtf WEDNESDAY!
WEMlGHTlFSTMOriOSPICWMCFMMM!
1 p WALT W$J..U : . ;, ; 1
VALTDeStv
tt DiKhh by um vi5t DiitnttrtiM Co., lat.,.0nt tuatr "Mectitu
oi Central AtfmtMioii $1.00 KUJi (Unitr 12) 50c
Communist, she said, was made
on Life Line, a program spon
sored by Texas multimillionaire
H. L. Hunt.
Mrs. Neuberger said tlie attack
was begun after she urged Inter
nal Revenue Service Director
Mortimer Caplin to withdraw tax-
exempt status for the DAK.
Cites VJ.H Law
The Oregon Democrat said lax
exemption for tlie DAR violated a
l'J34 law which prohibits such ex
emption to organizations "carry
ing on propaganda.
It does not, I take it, constitute
treason," she said of her insist
ence that the law be applied to
the DAR.
Mrs. Neuberger said Life Line
"treads a careful path of Innuen
do, implication, and false anal
ogy" in attacking her, but had
left it to individual letter writers
"to fill in the blank spaces."
Letters which Mrs. Neuberger
cited included one from a "public-
spirited citizen" who wrote:
You Jews run true to form.
You attack everything American
along with the Communists to
promote the destruction of Amer
ica and tlie final takeover.
"You don't like the DAR be
cause you could never be eligible.
Your ancestors probably got here
about 1900, after the Christians
built this country."
Modeled Swim Suit
Mrs. Neuberger, who as a sen
ator's wife once shocked the capi
tal's more sensitive souls by mod-
cling a bathing suit before press
photograplicrs, also cited a letter
from a woman in Grosse Pointe,
Mich., who wrote:
Believe me, you look mighty
small in the press, and smaller
still to those who once thought
you a gentleman.
Mrs. Neuberger said some of
the attacks might be the result of
a misunderstanding of her views
In seeking to clarify her stand;
Mrs, Neuberger noted that the
DAR had circulated bulletins urg
ing members to write senators in
opposition to tlie nuclear test ban
At the same time, she said, simi
lar bulletins in support of the test
ban had been circulated by SANG,
the national committee for a sane
nuclear policy.
The DAR speaks for the parti
sans ol one camp, she said
"SAN15 speaks for many of the
partisans of the other.
"But SANE," she added, "must
rely upon taxable dollars to fi
nance its activities, while the
DAR enjoys Jax-cxcmptiun."
All she was seeking, Mrs. Neu
hcrgcr said, was Utat the IRS fol
low the express) policy of Con
gress that the treasury shall be
neutral in national political de
bates.
On The Record
KLAMATH PALLS
BIRTHS
BOYS
T IPTON Born In Mr. nd Mr. Ployd
Tlplon in Klamath Vallay Hoiniul Oct.
h boy walghlnp 5 IDi. IJ'a ois.
1 EAFORD Born to Mr. and Mr),
Ployd Tealord. In Klamalrt Valley Hoip!
tal Oct. 4 a boy weighing a Ibi., 10 on.
e SQUE DA Born 10 Mr. and MrJ.
Jaist r-iquada In Klamath Vallty Hoi-
pnai Oct. 6 a boy weaning 6 idi., t
on.
GIKLS
nEPUY Born to Mr. and Mrs. John
Depuy In Klamath Valley Hospital Oct.
a girl weighing a ID!., 6 Olt.
DovlNH Born to Mr. and Mr. John-
ny DeVlna In Klamath Vallay Hospital
Oct. I a girl weighing 6 lbs.. 4' i on.
COLBY Born to Mr. and Mn. David
Colby in Klamath Valley Hospital Ocl. 2
girl weighing 7 lov, 61 1 ou.
SPEARS Born to Mr. and Mr. Aub
rey Speari In Klamath Valley Hospital
Oct. i a Qirl weighing 5 lbs., II ois.
OANPORTH Born to Mr. and Mrs.
Joel Danlorth In Klamath Valley Hospl.
tel Oct. S a girl weighing 7 lbs , 11 otl.
JOHNSON Born to Mr. and Mrs. LOW-
rence A. Johnson In Klamalh Valley
Hospital Oct. S a girl weighing 7
4l IS.
HAskinS Born to Mr. and Mrs. Dovle
J Hesklns In Klamath Valley Hospital
Oct. el girl weighlna 7 lbs., It's ois.
McKENNIE Born to Mr. and Mrs
Gene McKennie In Klamalh Valley Hos
pital Ocl. m girl weighing lbs., ft
Ml,
CARPENTER Rom to Mr. and Mrs
Witliam Carpenter In Klamath Valley
Hospital Oct. 0 A girl weighing A lbs.,
10 oil.
t! SUMMARY
Boys: 3'1 Olrls: JtJ
DOORS OPIN TONtTl
AT 6:45 P.M.
LONDON" )tnTTTl
PAGE-2
HERALD AND
'V, .! Jli " i
POSSIBLE CAUSE A microbiologist with the Tennessee Department of Public
Health examines a package of smoked whiteflsh that was taken from counters in gro
cery stores in Nashville Monday effer two people in a Knoxville family died of food
poisoning. Thoir deaths are thought to be the result of eating contaminated white
fish as this. Lab tests are pending. UPI Telephoto
Two Die After Eating Smoked Fish,
Six Others Fight For Their Lives
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (UPI) -I
Doctors fought a silent battle
against a little-known killer to-
day hoping they have caught
it in time.
A nromincnt businessman andiua
his 10 -year -old daughter died
Monday. A university professor,
his wifo and two children lay ill
with the same disease. A chemi
cal engineer and his wife also
fought for life.
The suspected killer was type
"E" botulism. Rare but deadly.
Solon Wants
Fiscal Study
BEAVERTO.N (UPD-Stalc Sen.
Walter Pearson, D-Porlland, said
Monday lie will seek an investiga
tion of tlie fiscal control proced
ures in tlie Oregon system ol
Higher Education.
Pearson, speaking at a meet
ing of Hie Washington County
Public Forum here, said he
thought "there is no real fiscal
control" and that this opened the
way to misuse of funds and
"prohaly to illegal use of funds
In Salem, , Secretary of Slate
Howard Appling Jr. denied there
was any illegal usn of funds.
Pearson said he would ask for
the investigation this year if a
special session of the Legislature
was called.
The Portland Democrat also
said he will push for an inquiry
into some of the procedures of
the State Board of Education and
wanted provision for legislative
review of rules and administra.
tlvo agencies.
Appling said "the audits divi
sion of my office has fur some
time been engaged in an exami
nation of the financial procedures
of the State System of Higher
Education.
'We have questioned a number
of those procedures and have re
quested tho system to either cor
rect them or to justify tliem.
he said. "None ol these matters
involves questions of personal
morality or culpability; all are
concerned with questions of sound
financial procedure and account
ability." Appling said the findings of the
audit will be mado public when
it was completed about Dec. I.
Dr. Roy Lieuallcn, chancellor
of the state system, said his of
fice had been working "closely"
with Appling "for several months
and had cooperated fully in his
audit effort."
U.S. Investigates
Missile Mishap
VANDENBERli AFB. Calif,
i UPI ' Air Force investigators
today attempted to determine
what caused a giant Atlas-I) mis
sile to explode shortly alter it
was launched from this Pacific
missile range base Monday.
The big intercontinental ballis
tic missile exploded on a 5,000
mile mission downrange into the
Pacific. An Atlns-F blew up nt
the same missile base during lift
off last Thursday night.
Klemeia Falls.. OrM
PukllsKeO eltv (eeceit Sal ) n ttiM.1
Serving sevtrsern Ore.eis
ami N.rtlserfl C.llfsvrnl.
V
Klamalh Publistilni C.mpany
Ma n at Fsnlanart
pnwt. TUve. -!!!!
w B. IwMlland. Publisher
nttnd .1 eeend-lesl matttr .1 In.
post ottx. .1 Kiansalh Palls. Ortoen.
gesi II, ItM. arttter act .1 C
nrest. March 1. let.. S.r.clast Met-
ee pant at KUmatn Palls. Oriter
and as .Mitital maiiint .tticii
cerner
1 Menth
I M.nlni
1 Year
Mall in MverKe
I Menlh
4 Mentha
I Veer
Carrier anfl Be.lert
I I fl
tie ta
HI M
I I !
til at
IIIW
Weefc.ay. Cepr. ttc
Sunday, Cepy lie
UNHID P!St INTIPNATIONtL
4UOIT IUIIAU OP CIKCULPTION
lutwrtMrt iMf rsKetyHsf (Salivary
ter nerese an metre, psaee.
TUM 1I1 kMrs) .is.
NEWS, Klamath Falls. Ore.
Doctors and public health offici-
als conferred through the night
at University Hospital and called
for scarce supplies of anti-toxin
located in Washington and Cana-
David S. Cohen, 35, a vice
president of the Berkline Corp.
of Morristown, Tenn., and Amy
Beth Cohen, 10, died shortly be
fore 8 a.m. Monday. Saturday
morning they had eaten smoked
whiteflsh bought at a Kroger Co
supermarket in West Knoxville
and packed by Dornbos Bros.
Fisheries of Grand Haven, Mich.
Ate Same Type
The others in tlie hospital had
eaten tlie same type of smoked
fish from the same store. Ru
dolph Paluzellc. 42, was in criti
cal condition. Mrs. Lawrence Sil
verman, 39, and her two chil
dren, Matthew, 10, and Rachel, 8.
were in serious condition. Palu
zclle's wife and Mrs. Silverman's
husband, a history teacher at the
University of Tennessee, were in
satisfactory condition.
Cohen and his daughter had
been admitted to the hospital late
Sunday night. No others in their
family had eaten the fish.
Several others reported to
Knoxville hospitals for observa
tion. Kroger ordered J ho 'suspected
product removed Irom its 1,375
Weather
Temperatures during the 24
hours ending at 4 a.m. PDT to
day. High Low
Astoria f6 52
Baker 8 3(i
Brookings 70 51
Mediord 74 43
New port 65
North Bend 65 48
Pendleton 70 44
Portland tin 47
Redmond 68 37
Salem 60 f,
The Dalles 74 46
Chicago 79 57
Los Angples S7
New York 83 60
Phoenix 98 62 i
San Francisco 77 ' 6n
I Washington 64 53
Northern California: Occasional 'U.S. Weather Bureau this morn
rain tliiiiuch Wcdntvsdav. ling, excluding Alaska and Ha-
The Dalies and Ilood R i v t r:
Occasional light rain tonight and
Wednesday; highs 63-73; low 43
30; gorge winds light, variable.
Bend: Partly cloudy; highs 63
70; bus 33-40.
Baker and La Grande: Partly
cloudy, scattered light showers
Wednesday afternoon; highs 63
70; lows J7-42.
Portland - Vancouver: Some
Now
-V Breakfasts - Daily - from 6:30 A.M
Plus Special Stick-To-Your-Ribt
Hunter's Breakfast $1, Served from 5 AM
Free Coffee Thermos Fill.
Hunter's Lunches packed to go.
BUFFET LUNCHEON u .a ...p m.-si.s
BUFFET DINNER
ALA CARTE SERVICE 2 PM to 5 PM
Banquet Room available for those
"Special" affairs Gourmet Menu!
Call 2-2765 tor details
KKSTAUKAXT
Avalon at So. 6th
lea.
f vr.'
stores in 22 Southern and Mid
western states. The fishery was
shut down while Michigan Agn
culture Department investigators
ran tests on its inventories.
"Horrible, Horrible Debacle'
"This is a horrible, horrible
debacle." H. J. Dornbos, prcsf
dent of the firm, said.
Botulism, caused by the micro
organism "Clostridium botuli-
num" in improperly processed
preserved foods, is fatal in two
thirds of the cases. It is hard to
treat because anti-toxin must be
administered for the specific type
of botulism involved and there
are at least five types. Each type
causes identical symptoms. Type
"E" generally is asso'cialed with
fish products.
Type "E" botulism killed two
Detroit women last March.
Health authorities Ihink it also
was responsible for the death
last Thursday of Chester O.
Mitchell, 64, and his wife.
Blanche, 62, of Kalamazoo, Mich
The suspected product, packed
in vacuum-sealed plastic bags,
hears red and white labels read
ing: "Vacuum-packed. Ready to eat
Keep under refrigeration. Dorn
bos smoked whiteflsh lor
smoked whitcfish chubs'. Dorn
bos Fisheries, since 1889, Grand
Haven. Mich."
Roundup
light rain through Wednesday
highs 65-70; low 45-50.
Western Oregon: Little light
rain through Wednesday; high
Wednesday 62-72; low tonight 42
52. Eastern Oregon: Partly cloudy
through Wednesday; hishs 65-75;
lows 35-45, colder some high val
leys.
Tatoosh to Blanco: Southeast
winds 8-18 off Washington becom
ing south 12-22 Wednesday; winds
variable 6-14 off Oregon becom
ing 10-20 Wednesday; occasional
rain.
High And Low
NEW YORK (UPH-The low
est temperature reported to the
"" 11 d('81''s al Bemirij'
Minn., and Craig, Colo. Monday's
high was 103 degrees at Imperial
Calif., and Yuma, Artz.
Your usable discards will help
ui to help others. Don't throw
'em awoy.
CALL:
The SALVATION ARMY
THRIFT STORE
lib. Klimsth II -9H
Serving
Ph. 2-2765
r-i
" ,Jcvi
&mii
7
ALGIERS (UPI) President
Ahmed Ben Bella said today he
will mass 100,000 Algerians if
necessary "to smash" tlie great
Kabylia revolt.
Ben Bella, who in the past has,H!sponsibilities. m the face of the
Dledccd never to use the armv counter-revolution," he said.
against the Algerian people, said I
his government in future "will
assume its responsibilities" to
quel! rebellious Berber dissidents.
He told a cheering crowd of 3,
000 persons in the stadium at
Bougie that his government had
proof the counter-revolution was
linked with foreign plots.
"We will mobilize 100.000 Al
gcrians if necessary in vigilance
committees to smash this counter-revolution"
he said.
"The only sort of dialogue Ait
Ahmed and El Hadj understand
is the dialogue of the machine
gun," he said, pointing to the
mountains where Hocine Ait
Ahmed and Col. Mohand Ou El
Hadj have their counter-revolutionary
headquarters.
Ben Bella spoke for 15 minutes
and frequently was interrupted by
the wild cheering of the crowd.
He has said he will not use the
Algerian army against the rebels
and his speeches are believed
Rocky Lists
Trip Agenda
ALBANY. N.Y. (UPI) Gov
Nelson A. Rqckefeller, a potential
1964 Republican presidential can
didate, renews testing the politi
cal atmosphere Friday and Satur
day with visits to Indiana and
Oregon.
A tentative itinerary, announced
by his office here, shows the gov
ernor will arrive at the Louisville,
Ky airport and at 9:30 a.m. go
by car to French Lick, Ind.
The New York governor will at
tend a private luncheon in French
Lick Friday.
Later he attends a luncheon
given by the annual convention of
the Indiana Bar Association.
The governor flies from Louis
ville to Eugene, Ore., airport and
will spend the night at the Village
Green motel. Cottage Grove.
HocKclcllcr has scheduled a
9:30 a.m. news conference at the
Eugene Hotel for Saturday morn
ing. (Later he will attend a Uni
versity of Oregon reception and
attend a box luncheon at the Re
publican western conference, Mc-
Arthur Court.
He is scheduled lo speak at the
conference at 12:15 n.m
Rockefeller will attend the Ore-
cnn.lrlshn fnnthsll nsm- ,t ,.,,!
" '
p.m.
Tito Ends
Mexico Visit
MEXICO CITY (UPIl-Yugoslav'
President Tito, accompanied by
President Afolfo Lopez Mateos,
was flying today to the western
provincial capital nf Guadalajara,
last official stop on his two-week
visit lo Mexico.
After two days in Guadalaiara,
Tito will go to the Pacific Coast
resort of Acapulco lor a week's
vacation before flying lo Wash
ington. Lopez had not been scheduled
to accompany Tito to Guadala
jara, but a government spokes
man announced Monday night
that the Mexican president had
derided to An so.
When you want more than the usual in a medium-price car,
Mercury's the one to look at. You'll find rich interiors in the
elegant new Park Lane. Extravagant spaciousness. Responsive-
.7.'i :t!aHt uiik net MarjiiJrr
Threatens Force To Smash Revolt
part of a plan to put down the
uprising by force of overwhelm
ing popular political opinion.
"In the near future we will as
sume our responsibilities, all our
"Tlle government and the peo-
pie unanimously will say "no" to
divisionists so as to allow the so
cialist revolution to continue its
impetus. ,
Ecumenical Council
Series Of Worship
VATICAN CITY (UPI) - Ecu
menical Council fathers today
overwhelmingly approved a series
of proposals for reform of Catho
lic worship, including greater in
sistence on preaching the word of
God.
The fathers voted at today's
session on five of 19 pending
amendments to the second chap
ter of a document on the liturgy
or public worship of the church.
Voting on the document, which
was discussed for three weeks at
the council's first session last
fall, will continue Wednesday.
The results were tabulated on
four of today's ballots'and showed
that all passed by great major
ities. The largest negative vote
cast on any one of them was 31
voles out of 2,298.
The most important of t h e
amendments approved today was
designed to put much greater
emphasis in Catholic worship on
sermons, which always have oc
cupied the central role in Protes
Interpreter
Flees Reds
TOKYO (UPD - Communist
Chinese defector Chou Hong-ching
told Japanese police today he
asked for political asylum at the
Soviet Embassy in order to get
to Nationalist China, not fiussia.
Chou surrendered lo police
this morning. They were waiting
for him when he walked out of
the Soviet Embassy, where he
had sought refuge Monday shortly
before the technical delegation
for which he was interpreter was
scheduled to fly back to Commu
nist China.
He is being held for investiga
tion of violation of tlie immigra
tion law, since his visa expired
Sunday, but the government indi
cated he probably would be per-
mitted tO gO tO Formosa.
I . Tl, Cn,Mle ,..cl, ll,ip l,r.,lc
of the matter when they learned
of Cliou's wish to go to the Na
tionalist Chinese.
The Nationalist Chinese Em
bassy began negotiations with tlie
Japanese Foreign Office today
for Cliou's release and said the
Japanese government should "re
spect the wishes of Mr. Chou
from a humanitarian standpoint."
The fact that Chou was clioos
ing Nationalist China took some
of the political significance out of
his act, which was first believed
connected with the current dis
pute between Communist China
and vice versa occur with rela
tive frequency.
WASH DRY FOLD
Experienced
2 Hour Service
Ironing Stretching
LAUNDERETTE
6th at Owins
The price
is medium...
the luxury maximum...
the car is Mercury
ilylmf
power -a 390 cu. in.V-8 is
a choice of two different -
Mereurv lives you more
the mot rf poni-f rn(;inn
rvm, tnxrx room. More mini pact 1 2 5uitrar hi i, 17.1
cu. ft A. Choice of rcy Maratidrr mling (left) or Rreerr
tiv DrMgn iinp, the rer window opftn-for vemilstion.
LINCOLN MCUHY PlV.$lON C $vff MOTOR COMPANY
JOE FISHER
477 South 7th Street
"We have proof that the revo
lution is linked with foreign plots.
If necessary, we will mobilize 100,-
0O0 Algerians in vigilance com
mittees to smash this counter
revolution." Ben Bella said new and impor
tant sectors of the Algerian econ
omy will be nationalized.
He said it was a time when
"our revolution is taking a deci
tant worship but in the past often
have been regarded as an option
al appendage to the Catholic Mass.
The proposal approved today
said that sermons should never
be omitted except for serious rea
sons. It emphasized the impor
tance of the priest using every
Sunday Mass as an opportunity
to explain the Christian faith and
Christian living.
The document said priests
should base their sermons on the
Bible and make extensive use of
Scripture in all of their preach
ing.
Another major amendment ap
proved today is aimed at simpli
fying the rubrics or order of
service of the Mass, It calls for
omitting certain duplications and
TUESDAY
ALTA.MONT PTA, 7:30 p.m.
meeting, school cafeteria.
WEDNESDAY
LADIES SOCIETY B OF LF&E,
7:30 p.m., social. Deola Wrvn.
ioio Anderson Avenue.
MILLS SCHOOL PTA, 2:30
p.m., meeting, Mills Auditorium
Refreshments following, cafe
teria.
TOPS CLUB, 7:30 p.m.. meet
ing. Ladies Community Lounge
Guests welcome.
RUMMAGE SALE, Beta Phi
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi, 9 a .m
to 6 p.m., old 88-cent store.
A.t,'W, International Relations
Study Group. 3 p.m., open meet,
inl. County Library lecture room
RUMMAGE SALE, Va.a Lodge.
i? a m- 10 3 P m - 1007 Main
DISTRICT GARDEN CLUBS. !
a.m., registration, fall 'meeting
Lakeview Courthouse.
KLAMATH COUNTY HISTORI
CAL SOCIETY. 8 p.m., meeting.
county library lecture room. Car
rol Howe, speaker.
then the ainel in ell these wars:
in its hrld. More rg rnnm, hfH
; Cafendar ;j
tffl'L00REl )
sive turn" a reference to recent
ly stepped - up nationalization
measures, against which Aid Ah
med and El Hadj launched their
counter-movement.
'El Hadj had a personal axe
to grind, Ben Bella declared,
"because he held important
shares in a big Algiers cafe that
recently came under nationaliza
tion." Approves
Reforms
eliminating non - essential things
which have been tacked on to tlie
Mass over the centuries.
A council press spokesman said
the other changes approved to
day were largely technical and
matters of terminology of no gen
eral interest.
Still to come are a series of
amendments authorizing the use
of modern languages instead of
Latin in a large portion of the
Mass.
The proposed changes would
permit national or regional con
ferences of bishops to authorize
use of "vernacular" the every
day language of the people in
most of the so-called "fore-Mass,"
the portion of the service which
comes before the offertory.
In an American church, for ex
ample, worshippers might find
English used in the reading of the
Gospel and Epistle, in certain
prayers, and in some of the con
gregation's chants such as the
Creed, the Gloria and the Sanctus.
BOGATAY'S PRESENTS
Glamour Deb&
run)
US
A favorite for school or play .
the two-teitured boot.
Upper is of smooth leather
mated with suede
5
SAAIN I
617 MAIN
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standard. And
looking styles.
w
'64 (Ylorcury
i No finer car in the
! medium-price ftold