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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 15, 1963)
f. Let's Make Music ACROSS X Wood-wind music maker 5 Musictl instrument ib. B English 22 Hawaiian precipice 13 Samuel s trainer (Bib U Bread spread 15 Bound 16 French "friend' 17 Wrinkle 18 Thoroughfares 20 Stockade 21 Varangians 22 Era 23 Green stuff 26 Guarneri products 30 Roman bronre 31 Indian weight 32 Female rabbit 33 Observe 34 Musician Paul 35 Poem 96 Designer 30 Oregon's capital 4t Assistant 42 Varnish in gred ient 43 Light fogs 46 Stringed instrument .SO Against 51 Oriental coin f2 Dutch rhee.e 5,1 Three singeri 54 Exist 55 Ceremony 5tiSf bird 57 Heart 58 Meal dish DOWN 1 Chooses 2 Harass 3 Shrub fvar.) A Sea ducks 5 Chairs 6 Charitable Sifs 7 Twelve ( Roman 1 12 13 IS 16 18 21 l 2 30 33 34 I fas I40 "rFi 36 37 33 41 43 44 45 146 50 51 The Court MUNICIPAL COURT Oct. U Jack Sdkem, drunk, S2S or five or 10 day j. Elmr George Perry, drunk, MS or five or 0 Days. AurgKo Serna, drunk, SIS or five or to days. I On The Record ? KLAMATH PALLS BIRTHS BOYS JACKSON Born to Mr. and Mr. Frederick Jackson in Klamalh Valley Kosoitai Oct. 10 a boy weighing 6 lbs., 12 ois. " KELLY Born to Mr. and Mrs. Rob- ert F. Kelly In Klamath Valley Hospi 1st Oct. 11 a boy weighing 7 lbs., 12' ? ois. GONZALES Born to Mr. and Mrs. ' Gilverto Goniales in Klamath Valley " Hasoital Oct. 12 a boy wetgninq ? lbs. LANDRITH Born to Mr, and Mrs. 'Horace Landritti in Klamath Valley Hospital Oct. 12 a boy weighing 9 lbs., V OIS. t SMITH Born to Mr. end Mrs. Jull- us Smith in Klamath Valley Hospf- tal Oct. 12 a boy weighing a lbs.. 3Vt OZS. FOGLE Born to Mr. and Mrs. Dar s win V. Fogle In Klamalh Valley Hov t pital Oct, 13 a boy weighing 7 lbs.. 12 ors. (C McNOISE Born to Mr. and Mrs. p Haines McNolse Jr. in Klamath Valley Hospital Oct. 13 a boy weighing 6 lbs. SCHHADER Born to Mr. and Mrs, Clltlon L. Schrader In Klamath Valley Hospital Oct. 13 a boy weighing 6 lbs.. Hi QZi. COGLEY Born to Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Cogiey in Klamath Valley Hos pital Oct. 13 a boy weighing 10 lbs. GIRLS KLIMBACK Born lo Mr. and Mrs. William O. Klimback in Klamalh Val ley Hospital Oct. 13 a girl weighing 8 lbs., ) 02. 1J SUMMARY Boys: 408 Girls: 363 LAWSUITS FILED Weyerhaeuser - Klamath Federal Credit Union vs. Boyd Stephens, aka Boyd A. Stephens, and Grace Stephens. OLD-TIMERS NEW YOHK iUPI Twenty- four employes of one New York hotel have been working there at least 23 years each. The group, whose combined time of employment at the Hotel Edison is 623 years, was feted recently by Milton J. Kramer, president of the hotel. Greyhound presents the "SEE THE U.S.A. TRAVEL TICKET" FOR 99 DAYS Now, plan your own circle trip overyourchoice of more than 100,000 miles of Greyhound routes, Travel the finest high ways. ..enjoy all of the luxury features of exclusive Grey hound ScenicruiserService It's all yours with the amaz ing Greyhound $99 for 99 days "SEE THE U.S.A. TRAVEL Ticket." For complete infor mation, call now or see: LEO F. WALLENBURNj WW AGENT, WfSTERN CRIYHOUNO 1J00 Kl.mlh Ar: . fH. TU J 4lt KLAMATH CALLS, OREGON Sft TNf .. TMf CtH0tl0 f ,,. iKvt tHt cumin TO OS. Anwr to Prvou uiji 8 Inn Olive genu 10 Receive, ts t reward It Alaskan city 19 Goddess 20 The self 22 Altitudes ;3Ca!th breath convulsively 24 Dance lis Nautical term lit. Shift 31 Winter vehicle 37 Country 3S KoboM (tar.) 39 Perched 40 Throhoers 42 Baseball term 43 Matthias (ab.J 44 Concerning !av 45 Budge 46 Nullify 47 Redact 48 Appraise 27 Heathen deity 49 Merganser 2R Complication 61 Algonqtnan 29 Appear Indian 7 8 9 10 It 1 17 j 20 2T 28 29 32 35 47 43 49 52 15 Records Oliver Hunter, drunk, S2S or five or 10 days. Martin Martinez Jr., drunk, J25 or five or JO days. Raymond Faithful, drunk, $35 or five or 10 days; vagrancy, continued. Irwin Weiser Jr., drunk, 525 or twe or 10 days; vagrancy, continued. Raymond Townsend, drunk, J2S or five or ID days. Mary Carr, drunk, $35 forfeited. John C. Crismon, drunk, SIS or five or 10 days. William Edward Parks, drunk, (25 or five or 1Q days. Constance Laetitia Cook, drunken driving, continued. Georqa Lewis Cdxjj disorderly con duct, dismissed. Juan Olivares Vargas, drunk, S75 (or--eited. Ernest UtMewoM, drunk, 12i or five or ID days. Jesse Eaton Jr., drunk, released to J Air Police. Oallas Lee Gordy, drunk, SIS or flv or 10 days. Joe Shavers, drunk, SIS or tiv or 10 days. Wilbur Carlyle Carlson, drunk, MS or five or 10 days. William Lesley Patterson, drunk, S25 or five or 10 days. Carl Carlson, drunk. 121 or five or 10 days. Johnnie Kauttman, drunk, 525 or tive or 10 days. William Richard Beaudttle, drunk, S2S forfeited. Gerald Lee Patterson, drunk, (25 for feited. Volney Alton Moos, vagrancy, SIO and 30 days. Marvin Andrews, disorderly conduct, continued. Carl Wharton, drunk, 125 or five or 10 days. "4'e'S tI. jETl ImEIIr lA'Bl'i'pbsi ITiHwfegT sm i lNl-rtei aFg?f Ctrl H A, StMsjTIA) I gHT Arn kIaIrIai aibe lelsmel EtCl5"tEl tWn! l&'elSl I'"' JFK Foreign Aid Plan In 'Deep, Deep Trouble' WASHINGTON (UP) I - Stri ate Republican Leader Everett M. Dirksen said today that President Kennedy's (orcign aid program uas in "deep, deep trouble" because of a "harder appraisal" by Congress and the country. The Illinois Republican would not speeulale on how much of Kennedy's original $4.5 billion authorization request might ul timately be approved by Con gtess. But his statement, made in an interview, supported specu lation that the administration may finally set little more titan the $3.5 billion voted by the House. Chairman J. William Fill bright, D-Ark., of the Senate Illinois City Hard Hit By Arsonist MONMOUTH. 111. (LTD - A "mad arsonist" set a series of fires that leveled two lumber yards and nearly destroyed a meta! firm early today. State volice posted armed guards around the Monmouth Hospital and the Colonial Nurs ing Home when the arsonist made an anonymous telephone threat that the two institutions were "ne.vl." Authorities also placed guards around ail industrial plants and throughout the business district of this west-central Illinois com munity of 10,000 persons. The Monmouth Lumber Co.. occupying a quarter block on the west side of town, and the Fullerlon Lumber Co., which ranged over half a block on the south side, were destroyed. Half of the Monmouth lletal Culvert Co. burned to the ground. A fire at the Warfield-McCul-logh Lumber Co. in the center of the town burned itself out. There were false alarms at the Lincoln Elementary School, a grocery store and at the hospi tal. "The fires definitely were the work of a mad arsonist," Mon mouth Fire Chief Dale Moore said. Klames shot hundreds of feet into the air and more than a dozen fire departments rushed to the scene. 'Hie constant wail of the sirens and the blinking of red lights brought most of the people of the town into the streets at one time or another during (lie night. Foreign Relations Committee which went back to work on the bill at a closed session today, agreed that the program faced difficulty. But "it's always in trouble," he told reporters. Kulbright said he would hold sessions every day this week if possible in hopes of finishing committee action and sending the long-delayed measure to the floor. But he would make no predictions as to ho soon or how ninth the committee would finally vote. "We will just plow our corn as w e go along," he said. Tlte foreign relations group sidetracked the authorization measure more than two months ago to work on the limited test ban treaty, in the meantime, opposiiion at least lo some parts of it appears to have increased rather than calmed down. , Dirksen said "the number of recipient countries is going down." and there are other areas in which many senators feel the aid program "isn't doing anything worthwhile." Compared with past years, he said, "the program is in in finitely more trouble deep, deep trouble." Smith Gets Promotion LAKEV1EW - Joseph Smith, highway engineer on the Fremont National Forest, is be ing promoted and transferred to the Mapieton d i s t r i c f of the Siuslaw National Forest, ac cording to Carl W. Simpson, Fremont supervisor. He will be assigned as district engineer in charge of invesfiga ti o n, planning, programming, design, construction, and main tenance of road and trail sys tems. Smith, whose transfer was ef fective Oct. i3, received his ap pointment to the Fremont in 1962. Prior to that he served for six years as district forester for the Florida Forest Service at Ocala and Lakeland. He was employed as highway design en gineer from 1!53 to 1958 for the U.S. Forest Service in C r e a 1 Falls, Mont. A graduate o( the University of Washington, Smith received his masters degree in forestry in S952 from Oregon State Uni versity. He is a veteran of World War II. Mr. and Mrs. Smith have four children, two boys and two girls. HERALD AXB NEWS. Klamalh IVWti ? si.' -v r ,.. ... t rssx ' rv c w . L.r mr r.. s.i; m t?aT. & '-jttt Jt UGm.,?-&mL , . J Jr:si FIELD TRIP Gilchrist sixih gruiJe slutJanis garher lor a picrurB bosJ ?int questions before leaving Odeli Burie Lookoul, one siop on rheir Held Trip in file Cresceflf Dis trict of the Deschutes Nation! Forest. Accompanied fey their teacher, Stanley Tor rance, back row at left, the youngsters observed the forest's recreational fc!!tt and learned how they were developed. District Ranger Leslie Yatet wai the guide. Department To Report Dru9 S,udy WASHINGTON' lUi'ii - The government was expected to re- port today thai a study of meri- ; ica! records of Sflt patients who were given Krebhraen failed to establish the value of tlte drug as a cancer treatment. Officials of tlte Department of Health, Education and Welfare scheduled a press briefing for 2 p.m., ED7, today on the Na tional Cancer insiiliile's often postponed report on its study of the records. Uniii now, Ibc department has maintained consistent ly that sponsors of Krcbiown have failed to furnish enough data to prove the efficacy of Ihe so-called cancer drug. "1 think the study of the med ical records uilf show no change in this position," an in formed source said, "The report is vouched in conservative sci entific language hut it is def initely critical." Tiie report is hascd on a study begun Aug. 12 by a panel of experts specially picked for the task by Dr. Kenneth Endi colt, director of the institute.. The members of ihe panel locked themselves in a Wash ington motel Imm Aug. !2 to Aug. 1? to prepare the study. Fails, Oregon T uoriay, Gilchrist Sixth Graders Make Forest Field Trip GllXHltlST Gilchrist sixth f year's Colurabus Day storm, aad grade sXwicais took a field trip j sommcr homes damaged by 4i lo the Crescent District of the Deschutes National Forest on : Oct. 9 lo sludy the recreational ! facilities and ways they arc dc- velopcd. Accompanying (he 3J mem bers of ihe class were Stanley Torrance, sistb grade teacher, and two patents, Mrs. Henry Clark and Mrs. Harry Gardner. The trip was conducted by Dis trict Ranger Leslie Yates, with J, D. Tomiinson driving (be school bus. Leaving Gilchrist a( 3 a.m., tlte group first stopped at Cres cent lake and hiked a short dis tance on the Oregon Skyline Trail, noling trail signs, irail blazes, and water oars which protect tlte trail from erosion. At tlte Spring Campground, tlie construction foreman, Wayne Keeney of Giichrisl, explained the new facilities under con struction by ihe forest service. En route to the Crescent Lake Campground, the students ob served slash piling work, which resulted when ine blowdown timber was logged following last COMPUTE TREE SERVICE BAKER'S LANDSCAPE NURSERY 6200 Sd. fti TU 2-55S3 October i fXS PACES storm. Tiie recently completed rampground was ihe site srieei cd for lunrh, Tlte iittai siop was at Odel! Butte tsokeut, where the class hiked the last half-mile because the road is still tinder construc tion and unsuitable for school bus travel. The osc-year-oiri tower at Odell Butte is unoc cupied during this season, but Use students were briefed on tlte use of the firefinder for locating smokes. The group returned lo G i ( christ around S p.ro. to compare notes for a report on tlte trip. JUMPKH'S NO JUNIOR ORANGE, Mas. UPI! - Mml Lawler, a Manchester, Conn., broker who will he 64 next hirth jday, claims to be the nation's eld est sport parachutist. J5e has been iaking lessons al ihe Orange Air port parachuting center. Southern Oregon Insurance Agency Sftasfa Way WHCO VUUUIKI Castro Victim To Speak Before Knife-Fork Club What it !els iike to iese a million dollars rtfi of prop erty and the accumaiatMsa of a lifetime lo s rebel JiAe Fidel Castro, and fcarely tscaj sssls your life and tost ot yoar asn iiy's, is the story nicfltbers o! &e Klattwth Fails Knife and Fork Cfeb hear Vfeiejay evening. Cel. IS, al Iheir din ner meeting al Use WssseiBa Ho tel. Tciiing the story will be ca-iive-born Dr. Kicoiaj Gtsaahys de Mendoia, tusiness asid pro tcssionai man, owtwr i proper tv KSc!3iRg a itffi.69 eoeatt front home uhielt Castra him self nsurped and lived in while ihe Menriixja family was shanl rd over lo live "sssest fcose." iseiore being given the opporta Rity to "get out with 5 and our lives." The speaker -ceases from one i of Caba s mosl preiminejxi aad progressive famiiies. H grand at!ser was Use isrst efesef jss tice o! tlte SpreBie Coat t Ctiba tn IBtffl foiiowing tile Ko eratloti of the tslasd from Spain. He attended college la If I'mlrri Stales and rinring ine PTA Will Meet MOUNT SHASTA "If w KeuRt Shasta Elementary PTA sill hold its regular roonlhly meet ing Thursday, Cel. IT, al 1 p.m. Mrs. Jack Salo, president, will conduct the business ses sion in tlte Methodist Church Cues! speaker will be Sirs. Blanc- Brooks, scitooi nurse, who will discuss the purposes ol tire Child BomeSaciety. NOTICE Reu'denti at Ktamatti County wntn'ng to sign ihs jellio Jo Woye Morse, y.S. 5olr, r tJi purpose f invettigotirtj tfi rcoso ffty tt jt plication, pretenrfy pending faefore tt Federaf Commum'tMioBS CoromiMion, ittt fne rj?ol!ol)o or Ijonslotoft in lis Kiomoth loBs oreo by Video Utility Corporation, not mot been beard as of thij dote, may toil: TU 4-7804 TU 4-6992 TU 2-1259 dispatching warmth and convenience to your home Everyljorly ialks ioat iha -weairtsr; ihesa men do soffisfhing shout it, Beioie weaiJier cbangels txswr, irsesa ss&ssiims of El Paso Natural Gas Company's -dispaixMrsg crew determute the n&ttice it Ktenfc tt th change, anticipate viha wiI Ree-d addifiaRsl natural gaa and la vth&i quantity They deierroiae w&fch weBs w23 pnjwrJs tha ga?, and through which lines it wi3l travel. Mainlines are "packed4 in advance el a cold spell so that yoti will have as ample supply fisei at fee proper instant. Scores of variables affect dispatchers' Jobs: iseSs ar sliut -Sown r tarried on; tSifferest riuaniifies of gas are required on weekdays than on Sundays and holidays; as gas ex pands or contracts Recording to tempera ture, the actual volume of g&s which can be transmitted throagh the pipeSna -varies. Dispatchers nraist anticipate, 'wateb. for, consider and ant upon a mia variety oJ cireamsJanees, It is a 24-hoisr-a-day, 365-day-a-year responsibility one wnich fis sures your home comfort and convenience ground the clock, around the year. It you are sot yet asing this modern fuel, caS your retail gaa distributor soon. EL PASO NATURAL 6AS COMPANY ltH Sl jtMtiiw, B ri HtmS WiSlM (m5 t MnilwliKtlfM tftwfiwi t m . WIMWt OUtOSK 3 MJ3t ' VLiftWVk toum WE St MtCfl KWS wwte 5 siH(JM'ttiinSM cmvt SWf$T MISSM1 SS C8trWf SCEt i?S. remainder o! his life 5tas beea aelive In the business and so ciai life of Csa. He received fe doctorate in civii and ad minislralivc few. He wiS tett haw desperate is tire -situation between tite rebel A. BR.N.O.deMEKDOZA. leader and ine United Siales; imi math becking Use Conv mussisis of Russia are giving and what is cspected in return. He speaks excellent English, Be now lives rit Itis wi!c, a native o! the U.S., and three cfcSdren in St. Louis, 55e. noIJyT POPS ) I -A - n WEST s 5