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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 11, 1963)
1 1 Fish Leaves Three More Seriously III NASHVILLE, Tenn. (LTD -The latest victim of the rare but deadly botulism outbreak was re ported in "very critical" condi lion today. The patient. George Breault, 54, was placed in a respirator after the virulent food poisoning began to affect his respiratory system Thursday. Two other persons were in "se rious" condition at the Univer sity of Tennessee Hospital in KnoxviUe. The food poisoning, apparently stemming from pack aged smoked whitcfish, has ' claimed seven lives five in Ten nessee and two in Michigan. Medical authorities said the supply of antitoxin should be ade quate, as long as there are no; new cases. They said soma ad ditional antitoxin has been lo cated in Moscow and at the Pas teur Institute in Paris, but ap parently no call has been made yet for these supplies. There was uncertainty that all . of the contaminated fish believed t responsible for the outbreak has .'been found. Ohio health officials '.said Thursday there was a "dis - tinct possibility" that some of the -. suspected smoked whitcfish packed by the Dornbos Bros. ; Fisheries of Grand Haven, Mich., ! was sold in Ohio. : Type "E" botulism was re sponsible for the deaths in Kala mazoo, Mich., last Thursday of Mr. and Mrs. Chester Mitchell and the deaths Monday in Knox viUe of David Cohen, 35. and his daughter Amy Beth, 10, accord '. ing to the Food and Drug Admin I lstration (FDA). ; : Tests continued today in the deaths of F. W. Pruter, 36, Mrs. ;Anna Phelps, 51, Andar Nold C. Daley, 49, all in Nashville. ;" The deaths had been unex- plained until Cohen, vice presi dent of a furniture company, and his daughter died within 15 min utes of each other at University Hospital Monday morning. House Cuts Space Budget, Rules Out Joint Venture WASHINGTON (UPD The ad-lpropriations bill that included the ministration counted on the Sen ' ate today to restore deep House ; cuts in the space budget, and to '. overturn a surprise resolution bar ring any joint U.S.-Soviet moon expedition. The amendment, which caught administration forces unawares, was tacked on to tho catch-all $13 billion independent agencies np- FOR A FINE SUIT? lor Ju.t fl.1 we'll nakr nvrr lltal ennd (but old fssh loiirilt double brratltd tult In your rloirt Into ntorn 1 1 n r ' -hrraitod m a d I. Vn, m lo make laprl i-hanfft. (iuarantttd al(ra linn on mtn'a and u nmrni rlolhtnt; at rxiionibli IDA'S TAILOR SHOP 125 N. Eighth 15 CADILLAC 1964 Models Ready for Immediate Delivery! MM PAGE-2A HERALD AND Religious Issue Clouds Debate On Federal Aid To Colleges Bill WASHINGTON L'PI Thctforees to steer the bill past thei The fust lot vote, however, Senate ed-ed toward the thickct'bristlins religious issue. of the religious issue today in de- bate on a $1.5 billion b program s ould oiler an amend of federal aid to colleges. m lu iir any of the proposed 6 . . rr i measure, nowever, was ui uu r until Tuesday under an agreement larlan nli universities, that will limit debate then on! Ervin said in an interview that .impnrlments to 1', hours cacbic a"y '"s" ' I"'1'1"-' ,umls and six hours on the bill. , , .., . nun pn-oiy n uLoauiiK uruiii left open lor Saturday and -Mon day before showdown voting starts, backers began marshaling Exiles Offer Medical Aid MIAMI UI'1 About 1,500 CX-,,i. iled Cuban doctors have volun teered to return to their Com munist homeland and liclp their countrymen recover from t h e ravages of killer hurricane Flora. The offer was made by the, 1,500-membcr Cuban Ixile Menu cal Association Thursday alter Cuban broadcasts said there was a critical need for medical aid in the storm-torn nrovinccs of Ca-' maguey and Oriente. Dr. Enrique Hucrtas, president of the association, said the doc tors would return under the pro-. tcction of the United Nations and the International Red Cross. Iluertas emphasized tho physi cians would stay in Cuba only , , , : i'"";"-". credible rejection by Fidel Cas tro of American lied Cross aid." Havana Radio reporled only 47 known dead from Hie vicious tropical twister, but llicre were indications the Castro govern ment faced a major catastrophe. National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA' budget. Sponsored hy Rep. Thomas M. Pclly, Jl-Waslt.. it banned use ol space funds lor any joint moon effort with Russia, as suggested by President Kennedy last monlli In a speech before the United Na tions General Assembly. Pclly said it would be folly to snare in a moon venture wuu inc Russians. The House, on a non record vole, approved Pclly's amendment, 125 to 110. At the same lime the House approved a NASA budget of $5.1 billion for the fiscal year ending June 30. Members ignored warn ings from space agency officials that anything less than $5.: bil lion would set back the Apollo man-on-tlie-moon program by two years and incrcaso its over-all cost by from $2 billion to $3 billion. The bill as it came to the House floor provided $600 million less for (space than was originally asked by the President. But the House earlier had placed a $5.3 billion ceiling on space spending and the administration agreed to go along I with the lower figure. mmmmmm BROS. INC. tU. TU 4-41S4 LPS NKttS, Klanulb Kails, Ore. Sen. Sam J. Lrvm Jr., U-.YC. construction from emm to sec- iUl'lrort a religious institution !uuld be a violation of Hie Con slitulion's First Amendment. The North Carolina Democrat acknowledged that if approved, the amendment might bar any federal aid in the bill from going to Davidson Colicgc or Wake For est College in his home stale. Ervin also said he would press for action on another controversi al amendment permitting private citizens to challenge any giants hv anlhoriin!' court suits to test v.-iirlilv nf such aid. Sen. Wayne Morse. D-Oro., floor manager for the "second install ment" on President Kennedy's broad 24 - point education pro gram, screed notice he would op- guise Ervin's amendment. Tiny French Singer Dies PARIS (L'PI i - Edith Piaf. France's "sparrow of the streets," died today in her Paris home after a long illness. She was 47. The petite singer died of an in- l.-l W.mnr,.,M a rrli,.n) "'spokesman said She returned Thursday by am bulance from her Riviera villa, where she had spent most of the summer recuperating aller falling ill last winter during her last pub lic performances. The frail, mop - haired little woman with the great voice was a French symbol for more than a generation in music halls around the world. Her story, one of illness and tragedy, showed itself in her powerful delivery of French love songs. Friends of (he singer said Miss Piaf fell into a coma at her villa about 2 a.m. Thursday and was rushed by plane and ambulance to her Paris home. She was to have been admitted today to the American Huspital at iNcuuly. , Soybeans Put w Under EITlDCirCIO WASHINGTON iUPI - The Interstate Commerce Commission said Thursday that Galesburg, 111., and the Pacific Northwest are full of soylieans. As a result, the ICC ordered the Association of American Rail roads to halt all future shipments of soybeans to the areas. In the Northwest, the embargo will apply to shipments of bulk grain as well as to soybeans. It will affect all shipments to Port land and Astoria. Ore., and Kal- ama. Longview, Vancouver, Taco- ma and Seattle, Wash. Also embargoed arc all ship ments of bulk grain and soy beans consigned for inspection or diversion to Denver, Ugdcn, Spo kane and all other iusiei'tion IHiints west ol those points. HOUSE CALLS Only I" Local t Arra Billy Golden TV Jc Green Slompi, Too! TU 2-1259 Plan A Party For The Round Table! Birthday parties, anniversary events, or any other kind of gct-togcthcr arc more exciting in tho fabulous Round Table of the Wincmo Motor Hotel. The food is superb . , . sinling steaks, tempting seafoods, or delicious chops. And tho atmosphcro is delightful. Next time you plan a dinner party of any kind, plan it at the Round Toblc. Winema Motor Hotel 1111 Main Friday, October II, 19M !was expected to come on a sub- .jtitutc bill sponsored by Sen. Win ton L. I'routy, IJ-Vt., to have the Senate accept a House - passed SI 2 billion aid to education bill, Prouly said his sole aim was to "get an education bill this year." and not have dilfering House and Senate versions "bugged down hoiclcssly in con forenec or in the House Rules Committee." Hy accepting the House bill in tact, Prouly said in opening round debate, the Senate could send the measure directly to the unite House. The Senate bill provides loans and grants to colleges over five years for construction of science and engineering classrooms and libraries. No funds could be used to build Bible colleges or class- rooms ocvoicd to instruction in theology Negro School Boycott Expected To Continue PLAQUEMINE. La. H'Pli - Negro students who have been teargasscd by police for the past three days in protest marches in Iberville Parish (county! today were expected to continue their boycott of Negro schools. The students are seeking deseg regation of public schools and other anti-discrimination action. Student leaders were vague about the plans but police stood ready to break up any demon strations and Sheriff C. A. Grif fon said he found information int.: link the marches with the Con-1 gross of Racial Equality. ICOREI. Griffon said he found "an of- fical paper" in the pocket of ar rested Negro leader Charley Oubrc. ID. linking Oubic with CORE. The students have said they were not connected with CORE. A state district judge issued an, injunction Thursday forbidding CORE from demonstrating in the parish. Ronnie Moore, CORE Louisiana lield secretary, said the injunction would be appealed.; Although about 1.400 students stayed away from throe schools Thursday, only 30 took part in the demonstrations and a rally. Arrested with Oubrc was James Payne, 2, of Birmingham. Ala, Both were charged with disturb- IMP ll tMa,-A unA rfiicinn In move on. Pavne a .nHHU,,IK- booked with inciting a riot. Sheritf s denudes fired about lni"' tear gas projectiles over the heads of one marching group led by Payne. Another group headed hy Oubrc dispersed when depu ties pulled out tear gas equip ment. Both groups were made up of about 25 Negroes. Elsewhere in the Nation: llirrninghiiin, Ala. Negro leaders continued preparations to day for a possible resumption of massive racial demonstrations with a number of "nonviolent workshops" teaching tactics for demonstrations, Integration lead er Martin Luther King Jr. is ex pected to return to Birmingham Monday. Washington A presidential tram reported to President Ken nedy Thursday on its personal study of the Birmingham situa tion Former Army secretary Kenneth Rowill and lormer Army football coach Earl Blaik refused 1 fi sm THE OLD AND THE NEW A new storm water pumping station this week replaced an old one at the foot of Owens Street. The old station (left! was built in 1933, but was found to be inadequate and was torn down to make way for the new facility (right). One pump was trans ferred to the new station from the old, and two new pumps were in stalled. Storm drainage water from Mills Addition collects under the comment on their report except to say "we had excellent coop eration by Negroes and whites." Washington The Defense De partment ordered all military in stallations in tho United States with 500 or more military per sonnel to submit semi-annual re ports on oil-base racial discrimi nation. Oxford. .Miss. A Mississippi highway patrolman has filed suit against the United States for se rious injuries he claims to have suffered during the University of Mississippi integration riot Sept. 30. 1962. Patrolman Welby Brunt, asking 5150.000 in damages. claims he was struck on the head by a tear gas projectile fired needlessly and carelessly by a U.S. deputy marshal. SATURDAY KLAMATH EXTKNSIO.V ALUM. XI, 12 noon, potluck, Mrs. II. V. Borton, 3421 Chelsea St. AK "'ASH. OTI Diesel Class. ' c RL'MMAUK SALE, St. Augus tine's Altar Society, 8 am, Mur phy Bldg , Merriil. RUMMAGE SALE. Quota Club. 8:30 a.m. to t2 noon, old Mo!a torc's Restaurant. NAOMI SHRINE 5, Order nf White Shrine. 8 p.m., friendship night. Masonic Temple. RUMMAGE SALE. AAL'W, 0 a.m. to 12 noun, old 83 cent store, Main and Tenth. RUMMAGE SALE. Bethel 61. !) a.m., old Reliable Cleaners Bldg. DEDICATION CEREMONY. Martin Frain historical marker. 10:30 a.m. Veterans Memorial Park. Ry Klamath Chapter. DAC Public invited. RUMMAGE SALE, Lions Club Women's Auv. 9 m to 3 pm . old Town Shop hil: . 3th and Main. MI)Y ni-nilt-.L S. Joh t Daughters. 10 30 am. members to attend services with tjueen Laurie Bums. First Metlnxli-t Church. MONDAY DEGREE OF HONOR. 7 30 p.m., buMiiess merlin;, refresh ment'. KC Ha!!. GREAT ROOKS DISCISSION GROUP, 7 ::o p m . Sophocles " Antigone." t'ltv l.ibi.iry base ment. Ijcralil anilJrttTS Klmtfi Ftlft, OrtfM PublnhMt av MCf)t $! 1 Ivfldt? 5frvtq Seuihtrn Orijei nd Nerthffrfi Ctliffwm by k limit Pubii!hin Ceipy d T FP'-'s)'-f TUtXW HM W SNttiatf- Pufi fr fnttrtd i ttcond-oan nattr at tt Pisi i fc'arn1 f t . C-acn. n Auwtl I If, vrttftr act 1 Cn a,rM. varc J Sfvcvotn tw it Dl4 at K lamt Fjlit, Ortga ' and at adiltnal miilma, iHicti: Carr.fr 1 Mtntu 1 7l i fVnin 1 1 Yir 111. Mai) in Advance 1 Mtnih t 1 " Mflhl 111 W 1 Yar t.H Crrr and Ptatari WttkOly, Cy, IK Swfldiv, Cy IK UNITID PtD! INTIRMaTtONAL AUDIT UMAU OF CIRCULATION $iriri Ml rtttnf dt'tviry thor mw-mm art Im, aiuiiv 4bm ; Communltij. j ( f J J 't-l- LCI HI 4,1 Weather High and low temperatures and precipitation for the 24 hours end ing at 4 a.m. today. High Low Pep Astoria 70 54 .24 Baker 73 33 Brookings M Medford s:i Sli .12 Newport 70 34 .04 North Bend Ml 53 .12 Pendleton a.; ."( Portland 70 ,"S T Redmond 72 4!) .01 Salem 71 52 T The Dalles 7S 60 .02 Chicago 82 67 T Los Angeles B3 62 New York 67 40 Phoenix !I7 71 San Francisco 74 58 .6'J Washington 72 47 Northern California: Rain in the extreme north late tonight spread ing southward Saturday. Cooler. Portland - Vancouver: A lew showers and clearing periods to- night. Cloudy with occasional rainltatinn above normal. McNamara Rejects Navy Bid For Nuclear Carrier ; WASHINGTON lUPD In a decision sure to set olf a storm of protest Defense Secretary Rob- lert S. McNamara has rejected urgent Navy proposals to build second nuclear powered air- cralt carrier for the U.S. licet. After .many months of delibera tion, the decision was readied Wednesday that a new conven tionally powered flattop should be built instead of the atomic type recommended by Vice Adm. Hy- man G. Hickover and other nu clear experts. Ollicial announcement of the McNamara action was expected today, though there was the bar- est possibility it could be heldinut enlarging the Navv budget. up by Navy requests for further consideration. ; The Mightiest 2j UNDER lf7", SWiifi fiiIm!M "5 TECHNICOLOR I -lwM General Admission $1.00 II I jnoRl rt,;u.-- ttA. i cn. II TONITE ...SATURDAY! rn i in nui im i mMSbk niui i ni i nnninin I fllAlll-flllWIIlAg falRA LULLUPniUIUM ay land! R A SL UliOWSTOHTPcLIKT WALKER iVL''. - hSffSwDS: FABIAN ZZSl ISCPADE i 'v. .ii kV. 4- tt rsVrwi mi - : . .... .....tW ' TOBY 1. I i I ..-.'.'iiii.i.':-r'i'.lr-vji Roundup Saturday. Lows 50-35. High Satur day near 65. Western Oregon: Partly cloudy with brief showers and patches of fog tonight. Increasing clouds Saturday with rain beginning along the coast and spreading in land. Low tonight 42-54. High Sat urday 62-72. Eastern Oregon: Showers and local gusty winds tonight. Partly cloudy with showers and cooler Saturday. Low tonight 38-48 ex cept 32 in some high valleys. High Saturday 60-70. Tatoosh to Cape Blanco: South erly winds increasing to 20-30 knots by Saturday. Showers and periods of partial clearing. Five Day Forecasts Western Oregon: Temperatures near or a little above normal. Highs 65-75. Lows mostly in 40s. Recurring rain. Eastern Oregon: Temperatures averaging above normal. Highs near 70 and lows 35-45. Precipi- A Delense Department official acknowledged that Navy Secre tary Fred Korth was likelv to urge McNamara to reconsider. But this official regarded the de cision as final and thought new pleas "won't do any good." The chief reason for McNa mara's action appeared to be economy. A nuclear powered car rier might cost $125 million more than the conventional type. Korth and Adm. David L. Mc Donald, new chief of naval op- icralions. would be willing to sac .rilice several other ships in order to build the atomic carrier witti ' But McNamara was reported to hae rejected this. Opefit Tonite 6:45 Continuous Shows Sot, & Sun. Iran 12:45 Motion Picture of them All I Walt Disney w ' . r , v i - i s It ft.'..-- y wiiiim an station and is pumped into surface ditches. The total project also in cluded the revamping of the storm drain system under Owens and Whit streets to eliminate flooding. Total cost was $ 10,000, half of which went for the station. City crews did the work. The station was designed by Robert G. Kyle, city manager. Seven Latin Words Cause Controversy VATICAN CITY (UPD - Seven Latin words about papal infalli bility are causing controversy at the Roman Catholic Ecumenical Council. The words are: "Ex sese, et non ex consensu ecclesiae." Freely translated, they mean that the Pope's infallible teaching authority is exercised "from him self" that is, in his own right and is not dependent on the "consent of the church." In other words, the Pope doesn't have to poll the bishops of the church before dclining an article of faith which all Catho lics are bound to believe. Theor etically, at least, he could pro claim a dogma to which 09 per cent of the bishops and theologi ans of the church were opposed. And it would become, for Catho lics, an infallible declaration of divinely revealed truth. The seven Latin words which express this concept were adopt ed bv the last Ecumenical Coun cil, which met at the Vatican in 1870. While there is no question of repealing them, some of the bishops attending the current Ecu menical Council would like very much to see them "clarified and "put into context." us, A motion ktw i" W'-JSrA. H that takes rm "tit mm raw -MAURICE CHEVALIER.- m si tm k wnu wmsn, ikn MATINEE FOR KIDS! SATURDAY! Two Little Runaways in Japan... fjie exotic sights they saw.., thrilling aangers rney aored in a faraway land! TERESA WRIGHT COLOR CARTOONS Kidi2Se (Kidi & W'TCf' ' 4 -tj.! mill 'n mi mm "nrw Their feelings were voiced in council debate Thursday by a not ed U. S. prelate. At'chbiship Lawr ence Shehan ol Baltimore. He not ed, with wry understatement, that "the Catholic doctrine of papal in fallibility gives rise to many dif ficulties with our separated brethren." He suggested that this obstacle to Christian unity might be re moved, or at least reduced some what in size, by taking "great care at -this council session to make clear that divine protection from teaching error m faith or morales is not a sort of magical personal prerogative which a Pope may exercise arbitrarily, but is rather a gift of God to the whole church, and in actual prac tice is always an expression of a consensus widely if not unani mously held among the bishops. ISSUES DRAFT CALL WASHINGTON LTI - The Defense Department wants 13.000 draftees to be inducted into the Army in December. The December draft call, is sued Thursday, is a drop of 4,000 from the :17,000-man quota previ ously set for October and Novem ber. DOOR5 OPEN TONITI AND SATURDAY AT :5 CanHnuotu Sunday fiMi 12:45. Doors Optn 1:00 P.M. Show Surtt 1:30 P.M. , Out At 3:30 P.M. f5jApAN CAMERON MITCHELL 1 q Atfumtfr t 4 o