Travel Talk
Amwer to Previous runt
ACROSS
1 White or Blue
at rum
( S Good Hope, for
instance
9 Coin for
Chevalier
12 Notion
13 Poker stake
14 Periods o( time
ab
15 Pertaining to
a barber
17 Mariner's
direction
18 Frozen rain
19 Bombarded
21 Lateral part
23 Rodent
24 Art iLatin)
27 Evict
29 Be prolific
32 Traveler's bag
34 Disinclined
36 Turkish
hospice
87 Progenitor
38 Nickname
39 the seven
seas
41 Deacon (lb.)
42 Number
44 Crawford's
nickname
46 Appends
49 Course
53 Hawaiian ,
garland
54 Prized
56 Eess
57 Circlet
58 Has existed
59 Even (poet.)
60 Official
proceedings
61 Sum at ran
squirrel shrew
DOWN
1 Lice eggs
2 False god
3 L'n aspirated
4 Alleviates
Popular travel
vehicle
6 Herbs
7 Egyptian god
8 Fisherman
9 Shielded
IB A I L f 1 HON OIR
gggK gift A & e n VI 1 IMI
g. g n B Tgjc h g a j5 pe
10 Trieste wine
measures
11 Employed
16 Indolent
20 Tardier
22 Songs for two
24 Keenly eager
25 Chibchan
Indian
26 Of Slavic race
28 Malayan
ungulate
30 Anglo-Saxon
theow
31 Transcending
(prefix)
33 Feminine
appellation
35 Assessment
lists
40 Nat present
43 Cricket term
45 Question
46 Tropica plant
47 Firn
48 Viking explorer
50 Plastic
ingredient
51 Adolescent
52 Girl's name
55 Mohammedan
commander
1 p 13 14 I 15 16 n 18 I 19 110 111
T2 13 " u
iT 16 i7
il sr
ZI 2T "HS ' '
24 il 26 H27 2TT-j8 WW"
32 la srsr
55 37
55 jat) w r 41
42 i 1 144 45
46 47 48 r0?9 50" 51" 52"
53 54 55
56 57 ""58
59 Si 51 "
I I I I I I I I a
Lonely Hearts
Answer Still No
f
3
By ANN LANDERS
Dear Ann: That letter from
Gypsy, the middle-aged, rich wid
ow who was willing to buy her-
i self a husband
started me
" thinking.
I know you
don't believe in
I Lonely Hearts
Clubs, and nci-
Ither do I. But
since you hear
I from so many
fine people who yearn desperate
ly for companionship you could
perform a marvelous service by
helping these lonely people find
one another.
Of course you would have to
screen the applicants carefully.
They would be required to fur
nish you with character refer
ences written by a clergyman, a
neighbor and an employer. You
might even set up an interviewing
bureau in your home so you could
'personally meet these people in a
non-commercial setting and then
decide which individuals should
lie brought together.
You could match people accord
ing to religion, educational back
ground, interests and so on. Think
of the lives you could change.
JLP
Dear JLP: II sure could change
lives all right including mine. All
1 need Is a lonely hearts opera
tion In my own home.
Playing cupid for strangers can
be a dangerous, vicious business,
and I don't care what high-sounding,
respectable name you give
11. Obviously there are many de
cent people who are lonely but
I would not risk subjecting them
to the opportunistic, unscrupulous
characters whose lives are so
messed up they must seek friend
ships with strangers.
This "getting people together"
through the column pitch is made
dozens of limes every week and
Student Dies
In Accidenf
COIWALLIS (UHH-An Oregon
State University student from Bo
livia was killed in a one-car acci
dent on a Linn County road about
12 miles southeast of here Monday
niphl. '
The victim was Walter Helmut
Kyllmann, 25. who was a junior
majoring in engineering at tne
university.
State police said Kyllmann lost
control of his car on a slight
curve on the road and it ran off
into a tree. He was alone in the
vehicle.
Kyllmann lived at Corvallis with
his wile.
il will continue to gel the same
answer No!
Dear Ann Landers: Do you
think parents should disown their
children?
Both my son and daughter have
made unfortunate marriages. My
husband says so far as he is con
cerned they are dead. 1 am not
apologizing for my children, Ann
They were of legal age when
they botched up their lives, but
that is their business and they
are paying for their mistakes.
My husband will not permit
our children to come to our home
and he says I am being disloyal
to him when I visit them in their
homes. He becomes furious when
he hoars me talking to one of
them on the phone. I love my
children, in spite of the failures,
and my grandchildren are a
source of continuing pleasure. 1
couldn't bear to put them out of
my life.
This problem has caused consid
erable friction between my hus
band and me. Please express
your views. OHIO MOTHER
Dear Mother: If your husband
doesn't wish to see his children,
that's his business. But he has
no right to demand that you slay
away from them.
Don't invite the children to your
home when your husband Is pres
ent, but go to their homes when
you wish and above all, don't
allow this tyrant to "impose his
will on you.
Dear Ann Landers: Do you be
lieve in a jinx? A certain corner
in our town seems to have a curse
on it. There have been more
accidents at that one place than
anywhere else in the city.
I've had two minor accidents
at this corner and both accidents
have me baffled. The corner
well lit and there are stop signs
on both sides. Once I ran the
stop sign although I've known
for years that there is a sign
there. Another time I was day
dreaming and bumped into the
car ahead.
1 don't believe in jinxes yet
how do you explain this? KOO
KY KATE
Dear Kook: Avoid that corner.
Not because it is jinxed I don't
believe in jinxes but because
you have a fix on It and you al
ways wilt have.
Boss At GE
Announces
Retirement
NEW YORK (UPIl - Ralph
J. Cordiner, 63, a wheat farmer's
son who became chief officer of
General Electric and helped that
giant corporation through one of
its greatest times of trial, has de
cided to retire and will turn the
company's top spot over to Fred
J. Borch, 53, now executive vice-
president of the operations.
The corporation announced late
Monday that the board had elec
ted Borch president and chief ex
ecutive officer and Gerald L
Phillippe. 54. as chairman of the
board, effective Dec. 21. Cordiner
announced that as of then he will
retire as chairman after 13 years
as chief executive, first as presi
dent and since 1958 as chairman.
The veteran executive, interna
tionally known for his business
management, plans to retire to
his citrus and cattle ranch in
Florida, although he has . not
reached GE's compulsory retire
ment age of 65. The announce
ment from GE said that his state
ment "reflects his long-standing
personal plans."
Borch, who first became a gen
eral manager at 30 in the lamp
division and rose to become vice
president and group executive
for the company's consumer prod
ucts group and vice president-
marketing services, has a reputa
tion as a salesman for a corpora
tion which had $4.8 billion m
sales in 1962. When Cordiner be
came chief in 1950, its sales
were less than half of the 1962
figure, or $2.2 billion.
Phillipps became president in
1961. His service with GE includ
ed that as comptroller and chief
financial officer from 1953
through 1961. .
Industry sources have said that
Cordiner had planned earlier re
tirement, but postponed plans to
do so alter the electrical equip
ment industry was shaken by a
series of anti-trust sentences two
years ago.
Cordiner, at the time of his re
tirement in December, will have
spent more than 40 years in the
electrical industry. He planned,
and carried out a General Elec
tric decentralization program
which has been credited with re
sponsibility for the company's
growth and diversification; in 1962
its four great sales areas heavy
capital goods, consumer goods,
industrial equipment and aero
space and defense, were almost
equally divided in percentage of
revenue.
IHERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls, Ore.
Tuesday, October 8, 1961
PAGE-3
V is J ' i
y O :
Birmingham Negro Leaders Ready1
Demonstration launching Pads'
LONDON (UPI) - The Soviet
Union is accusing Communist
China of trying to hurt Russia's
"good reputation" in Asia, Africa,
and Latin America, it was dis
closed today.
An official Soviet pamphlet be
ing circulated by Novosti, the So
viet press agency, severely at
tacks the Chinese lor attempts
to undermine Moscow's position
and prestige in the underdevel
oped nations.
It charges that Western "colo
nialists and the Chinese critics of
Group Plans
To Apologize
PORTLAND IUPI- A delega
tion of Portland Negroes told
Mayor Terry Schrunk Monday
that it was drafting a petition of
apology to President Kennedy.
Twelve Negroes, identifying
themselves as members of the
Albina Taxpayers' Association,
visited the mayor at City Hall.
They said that the "apology"
was needed for threatening pick-
cling by the local chapter of the
National Association for the Ad
vancement of Colored People that
caused cancellation of President
Kennedy's visit here last month.
The President was scheduled to
stop to dedicate Portland Towers.
a public housing project, but his
visit was called off when the
NAACP chapter indicated it would
picket the project because ol
what it called "subtle segrega
tion." The NAACP chapter here repre
sents only about 2.000 of the ap
proximately 18.000 Negroes in the
area, they said.
RARE FIND A manuscript ledger containing records of a loan mads to Button Gwin
nett, one of the 56 signers of tha Declaration of Independence, was discovered by a
Springfield, III., collector recently. Right, is the page where Gwinnett's signature ap
pears as being in debt to the firm of Hillard, Dixon and Grove of Wolverton, England.
Hosticlc discovered the ledger dated 1765 fa a book shop in London. UPI Telephoto
Soviets Protest Red China's Attempts
To Damage Russia's 'Good Reputation'
Soviet policy appear on the same
sWe of the fence" in the struggle
for the emerging nations.
The disclosure followed a report
that Communist China is trying
to arrange its civilian air traffic
routings through the British col
ony of Hong Kong to avoid fly-
ling over the Soviet Union. Both
moves were signs that the
Moscow-Peking split is widening.
The Soviet pamphlet, published
in English, accuses the Chinese
of frying to set the socialist
countries and the nations of At-
Frank Sinatra Will Sell
Nevada Casino Holdings
LAS VEGAS, Nov. (UPI) 1
Frank Sinatra, "ace high" in the
singing department, has "I o w
snake eyes" in the gambling
world.
The singer, faced with revoca
tion of his gambling license in
this state of almost anything
goes, said Monday he would sell
his $3.5 million in casino holdings.
In a surprise statement, issued
through his attorney, Sinatra said
he would devote full lime to his
vocal chords and music business.
The stale of Nevada filed a
complaint Sept. LI holding that
Sinatra entertained Sam Giancana.
a Chicago underworld figure, at
the Cal-Ncva 'Lodge at Lake Ta-
hoc from July 117 to July 28 of
this year.
Giancana is a ustee in Ne
vada's "Black Book," a loose-leaf
compilation of 11 persons not wel
come in the state's legalized
gambling casinos on penalty of
loss of license.
"I was surprised, hurt and
angered," Sinatra said, "that the
Nevada Gaming Board asked. .
to revoke my Hicense to partici
pate in the gambling industry in
Nevada. . .
ilea, Asia, and Latin America
against each other."
The Soviets fear Chinese com
petition the most in those areas,
where the Chinese can stress the
fact that they are a non-white
race, unlike the Russians and
Western colonial powers. .
Moscow called this "racialism
and hidebound nationalism."
Soviet achievements in the de
veloping nations, the phamphlet
said, "reveal the utter untenabil-
ity of the contentions that the
Soviet Union has lessened its sup
port for the peoples of Africa,
Asia, and Latin America.
'In their efforts to sully the
Soviet nation's good reputation in
Asia, Africa, and Latin America.
the leaders of the Communist
party of China also claim that
the U.S.S.R. is out to 'exploit' the
peoples of those continents."
It answered these charges with
claims that Russia has granted
iaDoui sj.jj oillion in economic
aid to new nations.
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (UPI) -
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. -to
day began putting the machinery
in motion to back up his threats
of "bigger than ever" demonstra
tions if this city docs not bow
to Negro desegregation demands.
Also scheduled for this after
noon was the trial of three white
men arrested by police investi
gating racial bombings here.
They were charged with the mis
demeanor of illegal possession of
dynamite.
Aines's "task force" which led
some of the largest protests in
Southern history here last spring
planned a "non violent workshop"
this afternoon and the Southern
integration leader was to address
another mass rally tonight.
tne workshops and mass meet
ings were launching pads for the
demonstrations last April and
May in which King and more
than 2,500 other persons were
jailed in marches and sit-ins met
by police with fire hoses and po
nce dogs.
If the conditions that broucht
on the dynamiting and the death
of four beautiful little girls arc
not changed we will put on our
walking shoes and demonstrate all
over town," King said.
"Birmingham is the temple for
segregation," he said. "Wo must
turn on the temple."
Charles Cagle. 22. R. E. Cham
bliss, 59, both whites with Ku
Klux Klan backgrounds, and John
Hall, 36, were to go on trial in
city recorders court on the dyna
mite charges.
Conviction for violation of the
city ordinances could result in
$100 fines and 180 days in ail.
Elsewhere In The Nation
Selma, Ala.: More than 200 Ne
groes stood in line outside the
Dallas County Courthouse to regis
ter to vole. An estimated 35 ap
plications were received by regis
trars. A reporter - photographer
and three photographers said they
were roughed up by officers while
attempting to take pictures at the
courthouse.
Plaquemlnc, La.: Police used
tear gas Monday to break up a
protest march by about 400 Ne
gro high school students, there
were no injuries or arrests.
Orangeburg, S. C: More than
100 Negroes were arrested Mon
day for defying a ban against ra
cial demonstrations. The arrests
boosted the number of such jail-
mgs to 1.448.
Greensboro, N. C: An anliseg-
regation pickctline was slated to
be thrown up in front of a motel
here today following a similar
protest staged Monday night, the
first such demonstration in the
Gate City since June 6.
Outlaw Assembly Meets,
Calls For Bosch Return
SANTO DOMINGO (UPD-The
outlawed National Assembly cli
maxed an outbreak of anti-government
disorders here early today
by demanding the immediate res
toration of "constitutional order"
presumably meaning the return
of ousted ex-President Juan Bosch.
A communique did not say
where or whether the assembly
had met or how many of its
members were present.
The communique, signed by Sen
ate President Juan Casanovas and
chamber President Rafael Molina,
said the assembly would "wel
come international support" for
the Bosch regime.
An undisclosed number of per
sons were injured Monday when
police clashed with "student"
demonstrators at the university
here. The Interior Ministry an
nounced Monday night that 65
arrested rioters included "10 uni
versity students, 19 students from
other schools and 36 known agi
tators for (Bosch's) Dominican
Revolutionary Party." ;
Puerto Rico, which means "rich
port" in Spanish, was discovered
by Christopher Columbus in 1493.
DON'T DEPEND ON
HEADACHE REMEDIES
TO RELIEVE
NERVOUS TENSION
TTften everyday nervotu
tension dritws-you half-craiy..
don't depend on heaaacn
remedies to relieve lt...they
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Instead EetAlVA-TMNQUIL tablets
Unlike iipitin and omer ordinary ncao
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. . . Alva-lranquil uoicis are specially
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Aspirin imi olher ordinary neaaacno
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with their effective jedativo action, wero
especially formulated to relieve- thia
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over a long penou ui umo mi wum.i
ous release of medication so necessary
to reuevo nervous tension.
on
Trio Builds
Giant Clinic
Consultant Offers Advice
On Understanding Poetry
Kelsay Service
ROSEBURG (UPI) Funeral
was held here today for State1
Rep. William O. Kelsay, D-Rose
burg.
Kelsay, 50, was killed in a two
car collision near Klamath Falls
Friday night.
WASHINGTON (UPI I If you
i'snt to understand poetry, start
at the humble end" of the lit
erary scale with jokes and
work your way up.
American poet Howard Neme-
rov offered this advice Monday
night in a lecture at the Library
of Congress. Ncmcrov is the li
brary's new consultant in poetry.
His duties include consultation
on the library's literature collec
tions and ils program of record
ing contemporary poets reading
their own work.
A joke expresses tension.
which it releases in laughter."
Nemerov said. "It is a thought
of permissible rebellion against
things as they arc permissible
perhaps, because this rebellion is
at the same time stoically re
signed, it acknowledges that
things are as they are, and they
will, after the moment of laugh
ler. continue to be that way.
"That Is why jokes concentrate
on the most sensitive areas of
human concern: Sex, death, re
ligion, and the most powerful in
stitutions of society. And poems
do the same."
Namerov suggested that a "bus
iness civilization" which requires
professional comedians may be in
grave condition. He quoted a
line from a poem:
The safety valve alone knows
Ihe worst truth about the engine."
Be serious," Ncmcrov told
both poets and jokestcrs.
"The least hint that you think
you arc being tunny will cancel
Ihe effect," he said, "and there
is probably no lower human en
terprise than 'humorous writings.'
Three brothers, former Klam
ath Falls residents, Drs. John
Mosby, William Mosby and
James Mosby, dentists, have un
der construction in Lompoc,
Calif., one of the largest medi
cal-dental buildings in California
The huge facility, with 21,000
square feet of floor space will
provide facilities for one ortho-
donist, five dentists, eight physi
cians, one radiologist, a medical
laboratory and a dental laboratory.
Architecture will be contem
porary Spanish. Cost will ap
proximate $600,000. Completion is
sclieduled for the last of Decem
ber this year.
The brothers are graduates of
Klamath Union High School and
Oregon Stale University Dental
School.
Their father, Millard M. Mos
by. lives at 900 Oak Street in
Klamath Falls.
So when you feel depressed, lompy, o
edge, get Alva-lranquutameia. fuejr
never habit-forming. So safe as directed.
vou don't need a prescripnoa
Don't depend on headache remedies to
relieve nervous tension. Instead, get
Alva-Tranauil at all Druggists.
FREE
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Phan Us Your NtttJa
Deliveries Each
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IN THE VILLAGE COURT
th I Mar iw 2-1471
All Five Quints
Still Doing Fine
ABERDEEN, S.D. UPI All
five Fischer quintuplets continued
doing fine today.
St. Luke's Hospital said all of
them were tolerating their food
well and all five were still on
the bottle. Mary Ann, the first
born and the smallest, became
Ihe fifth quint to go on tlie bottle
Sunday. i
FRIENDLY
HELPFULNESS
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ond Purse
WARD'S
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Home
Marguerite Ward
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2S Hifh Ph. TU 2-4404
Morse Suggests
CIA Watchdog
WASHING! V i UPI ' Sen.
Wayne Morse. D-Orc., Monday
railed for Congress to create a
watchdog group to keep a check
on the operations of the Central
Intelligence Agency.
"I have been disturbed for a
long lime about the unchecked
power of the CIA." Morse said.
He denounced what he called
"creeping police state powers."
The Oregon Democrat said "it
Is an ugly fact that we have a
creeping police state power devel
oping within this democracy." He
added it was not safe for a de
mocracy lo have any agency with
vast powers over which Congress
has no check.
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