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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 20, 1963)
Severe Maine To Texas By United Press International A severe, multi-million dollar drought stretching from Maim to Texas worsened today with little hope for immediate relief. The Weather Bureau said it appeared to be the worst drought in Ohio in 80 years. Hundreds of fires broke, out, and B28 bombers from the Ko rean War were used to battle the flames in Arkansas. The Ag riculture Department extended disaster designation to more Missouri counties. The bee in dustry faced financial ruin in Ohio. Scattered rain fell in some places, but for the most part it only delayed the danger of fires for a few hours. The heaviest fall was 1.39 inches In Pes Moines, Iowa, just on the line 1 k L i i'wl Ik Pt.Vi ...... - - 811 m "n liii,aaicatlll2!&Hwfe I NO FISHING k White Rock Lake, once the water supply for Dallas, Tex., but now only a recreation area, is slowly shrinkinq. the victim of a prolonged drought. The lake was A'i feet below the spillway level late last week. The receding shoreline left this boeihouie on dry land. So far 1963 has been the second driest year in the 50-year his tory of the weather bureau in Dallas and has a good possibility of becoming the driest. UPl Telephoto Business Support Sought For Tax Cut HOT SPRINGS. Va. (UPI) -The administration set in mo tion Saturday a high-powered drive to convince the business community that it should use its Influence and prestige to help pass President Kennedy's $11 DENTAL PLATES Repaired, etc. Our convtnltnr, heady, practical, end ecenetnicel arvlcsi NOW available. No appalntmsnt ease'ae'. N dUr no wilting i..r rrdit Evtnlnff by rtqltit OPEN 9:00 5:00 1013 Main St. TU 4-1214 t ? t T t T t t "Where The Action Is!" iV OLDSMOBILE CADILLAC G.M.C. Q IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ) ON r OLDS New Jetstor 88 Fordor Sedan OLDS F-85 Cutlass Convertible OLDS Dynamic 88 Fordor Hardtop GMC Vi Ton, Va Ton Pickups - both V-6 and in-line 6, Long and Short Whcelbase fender side and wide side. Due to O GMC TRUCKS 3500 & 4000 Series o '64 Aft OLDS CADILLAC 7th & Klamath between the severe and mod erate areas. , The weather bureau said "se vere" conditions stretched in a triangular shape from Maine through Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas. To the north, from Mich igan to the Dakotas, lay a "moderate" drought area. States Close Woods Woodlands were closed to the public in Pennsylvania, West Virginia, New York, Connecti cut, Massachusetts, New Hamp shire, Vermont and Kentucky. Hunting and fishing were banned in Pennsylvania, Connec ticut, Massachusetts, New Hampshire and Vermont, and was curtailed in Minnesota and Tennessee. The Agriculture Department permitted farmers in Missouri i i i f I I'll ,i'vpV - -4 pev HJl!!Vi,W I -. ,-ild billion lax cut bill as soon as possible. The drums were beaten for tax reduction at an unusual gathering of the elite of the corporate community convening at this fashionable resort for a two-day meeting of the business council. Treasury Secretary Douglas Dillon told the top brass of business that the tax cut could have a profound effect on the nation's economic future. Based on BUI "The decision on the tax bill will determine whether, .In the years ahead, our economy will be surging upward or limping along, or 'dipping downward," he said in a prepared speech. He was picking up the same COMPLETE TREE SERVICE BAKER'S LANDSCAPE NURSERY 6200 So. 6th TU 2-5553 11 Jl'C&hr&tfM arrive in 10 days Illicit BROS., INC. Drought Worsens to graze and take hay from soil bank acres. Fourteen fires burned 229 acres in Arkansas, and state forester Kred Lang said a wind "could put us in real trouble." Physicians attending the Indi ana State Medical Association convention said the drought may have beon causing an un usual wave of respiratory Infec tions. Bee Industry Threatened State tree nurseries in Ohio withheld shipments of refor estation stock. Oh'io was in its 37th day without substantial rain, and apiarists said they faced disaster because the wild aster plants had stopped pro ducing nectar for the bees. In Kentucky, Flcmingsburg was down to one month's sup- - , h ,v fit -u ' f vfi theme that earlier had been sounded tiy Undersecretary of Commerce Franklin D. Roose velt Jr., and Sen. George A. Smathcrs, D-FIa. The administration had ar gued that passage of the tax cut will stimulate the economy to a record-breaking growth rato that will help ward off future recessions. , Cites Business Measures Smatlwrs in a speech Friday night cites recent administra tion measures intended to help business End told the industrial ists In effect: "You never had it so good." He said the Kennedy adminis tration had done more for busi ness than any other administra tion in 16 years but that the business community failed to appreciate it. Tile Florida Democrat men tioned recent changes in tax de preciation laws which he said liclpctl industry channel addi tional cash into new plants and equipment. Y x Y Y f Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y f Y Y Y Y Y Y Y X Cadillac Clb. Cpe. JLI I 1 . : .1 151 i Y Y Y Y 4-4154 Ph. ply of water with the town's major industry facing shutdown. Firemen in northern Kentucky were plagued by brush fires, some of which appeared to have been set by vandals. The western Tennessee fire danger was 94 on a Scale of 1 to 100. and 117 fires burned more than 1,200 acres of wood land in the state during live past five days. The Pennsylvania Forest In dustries Committee said the drought and fires could affect 68,000 persons with an annual payroll of $300 million in the timber industries. About 80 for est fires were burning In Penn sylvania, but all were believed under control. , Fires Plague States Georgia reported about 25 woods fires a day. West Vir ginia said 22 fires were burn ing out of control and 56 were under control. New Jersey was In its 20th day without rainfall, and all but one forest fire was under control. It had bkockened 2,500 of the 2,200 acres in Nor vin Green State Forest. New York Acting Gov. Mal colm Wilson extended the ban on woods and open lands to New York City and Long Island. Since Oct. J, there have been 358 forest fires, and 84 were burning yet Friday. Michigan Chief Fire Control Officer Milton Bergman said the state was "a powder keg of critical fire danger. In Stanton twp., in Wayne County, 57 fires have been reported this month. The State Conservation Depart ment said hunters would be al lowed to smoke only in author ized zones. Connecticut Gov. John N. Dempsey approved a plan to sell Middletown, Conn., 500,000 gallons of water daily from ex cesses in the reservoirs of the Connecticut Valley Hospital. Deadlines Approach On Classes LAKEVIEW - Oct. 21 has been sot as the deadline for persons to register for adult classes in veterinary medicine with Oct. 22 as the deadline for the class in farm income tax, announced Bob Elden. director of adult education at Lakeview High School. Persons are reminded that at loai-l 10 people are required per class before the class can be of fercd. Registrations thus far have been light, and interested individuals arc urged to contact Elden at WH 7-2335 or VVH 7-5212 before Oct. 21. The class in veterinary medi. cine will be taught by Dr. Wil liam Barry and Dr. Victor Hill, local veterinarians. The class will meet every Monday at 7 p.m. starting Oct. 21. Ed Casto. local CPA. will in struct the farm tax class, with the first meeting set for Tues day, Oct. 22. at 7 p.m. Both classes will meet in the vocational agriculture building at Lakeview High School. The course fee has been set at $8. Quint Boy Is Moved ABERDEEN, S.D. (UPD -James Andrew Fischer was auay from his sisters today as lie became the first of Hie Fischer quintuplets to go into Hie nursery. Sister M. Stephens at St. Luke's Hospital said there was no way of lellins when the (our other quints will leave their isn lettes where they have been since their birth Sept. H. She said the change, made Friday, actually would mean little difference lo James An drew. He weighs 8 pounds I ounce. "But he'll have blankets and things like that." she said. He will remain on the same three hour feeding schedule. All five quints received new bracelets Friday because they outgrew their old ones, put on just alter birth. A survey has found that eight per cent of every dollar spent In food stores goes for fresh beef. Klamath Pint, Orttt PwfelithM ttiv fict Sit ) ar tun4if sarvtM tautfttrff Dftan intj NwiMrn CallNtrtii Klimilh Put1itRin Cmaay Ma n at Eirianaf'a na TUiad Mill W. ft. SwMtlantf. PuMUMr Intart ttcn-ciai maittr it tt t ottica a! Kiamam Fan cviy n Avtwit ta, ifw. tfn4tr act ft Ctv rtt, varth J. tl' SaxeOait ao t ai it mamam Fat. or! at tMittfnai maiHnf Httt (friar I Mtatti VM ManrM tll.M i Ytar Stl.M Mall In AtfviMt i i.n 4 Mantua ... lilaa 1 Vtar Carrtar iM Daaiart Wtakiar. CHTi . tM Swntfavi Car 1M UNITIO ttill INTft ft NATIONAL AUDIT ftUftftAU O" ClftCULATtON IvftKrlktra Ml rXtlVl tfalivtrY tMir HrM m4 Na, ftMAift ftftaat TUataM 4-4111 Mfar 9 fJ. ;l Community. : Calendar ; SUNDAY ART EXHIBIT, 2 to 5 p.m.. works of .ieancne Villair Davis, Grants Pass, Klamath Art Gal lery, Link River Bridge. MONDAY AAUW, 12 noon, luncheon, W'i nema Hotel. Speaker, Mrs. Car rol Howe. JUNIPER GARDEN CLUB, 1 p.m., ornamental evergreens study, Mrs. Terry Cole, 1944 Hu ron. BETHEL 61. Job's Daughters, 7 p.m., meeting, fathers' night, Scottish Rite Temple. New time. HENLEY BETHEL 51, Jobs Daughters, 7:30 p.m., meeting, Henley Community Hall. MT. LAKl GARDEN CLUB,. 1:30 p.m., meeting, Gladys Met ier, Reeder Road. NEIGHBORS OF WOOD CRAFT, 8 p.m., initiation, KC Hall. Officers, guards wear formals. . ' .MERRILL LODGE 31, REBEKAH p.m., meeting, IOOF Hall. Merrill. TUESDAY ROOSEVELT SCHOOL PTA, 7:30 p.m., meeting, school audi torium. Child care provided. ALOHA CHAPTER, 61, OES. 6 p.m., no host dinner for. asso ciate grand conductress, Mola tore's. Members invited. DEGREE OF HONOR, 7:30 p.m., executive meeting, Ruth Kunzman, 1275 Lakoshoro. WOTM, Chapter 467, 8 p.m., meeting, star recorder's night, Moose Home. .WEDNESDAY MALIN GARDEN CLUB. 10 a.m., meeting, home of Mrs. Joe Halousck, Malin. Bring ar rangement. , EIGHT AND FORTY. 8 p.m., meeting, Mrs. John Glubrecht, Loma Linda Drive. MANZANITA CHAPTER, OES 8 p.m., official visit of worthy grand patron. Scottish Rite Temple. All OES members in 'vited. RUMMAGE SALE. Ore. Nurs es Assoc., Dist. 8, 9 a..m. to S p.m., old 88 cent store. 1013 Main. Proceeds for scholarship. SOJOURNERS. 12:30 p.m., luncheon, cards, Willard Hotel. Newcomers welcome. Student Seeks Wife In Hurry AUSTIN, Tex. (UPD -"Sam." a University of Texas student who gave no further identification, is about to be drafted. He put a sign on a bulletin board that advertised: "Help. Need wife quick. I'm being drafted and must get married by Oct. 3t. Call CiR 2-5720." I Kit in ranwruta a TialV l: I '..Viw.'.'', Joseph ELevine in association with ElvLandauand Jack J. Dreyfus. Jr. presents f MM a V i OF THE. i, ! 10 BEST kl' S nn r ' v vr ! ur inc. j rVCADI" i hnii . .KATHARINE RALPH JASON DEAN Hepburn Richardson Robards.jr iStockvell in Eugene O'Neill's Lon6 Day s Journey Into Might reduced by I TODAY! ;J DOOM 1 OHM (today : Ili4 Foreign Aid Foes Vow More Cuts , WASHINGTON (UPI I - Sen ate foreign aid supporters, cheered by success in the For eign Relations Committee, braced today for new attacks when the Senate begins floor1 debate on its $4.2 billion aid bill. The committee approved the measure Friday, restoring about $700 million of the $1 billion slashed by the House from President Kennedy's original $4.5 billion request. But the measure was still $300 million short of what the Pres ident sought and contained sev eral restrictions the administra tion does not want. Critics of the bill promptly served notice that they would seek further cuts when- the bilj reaches the Senate floor. Chair man J. William Fulbright, D Ark., of the Foreign Relations Committee said floor debate is set for Oct. 28. In addition, both the House and Senate must vote the ac tual funds for the program in a separate ' appropriations bill which could be the target for added economy moves. Before the final vote, the committee rejected a motion by Sen. John J. Snarkman, D-AIa., to cut the total to a flat $4 bil lion. But the panel voted to increase interest rates on all "soft" long-term development loans in the aid program. , Better Grades 19 Outline Ideas In Logical Order By The Reading Laboratory Written for Newspaper Enterprise Assn. To get he most out of the fol-' lowing, you'll have to get rid of preconceived notions about out lining. You probably remem ber outlining as a rather dull section of Freshman Composi tion. Before you wrote themes, you had to make outlines of them. When you wrote, you followed the outline. We'll call this type of outline a writing outline. The outlines we're going to talk about are fundamentally different from the outlines you use for writing. We're talking about outlines you use for read ing. They are analytical tools scalpels for dissecting the thought-structure of a textbook. In a reading outline, the ideas must be arranged according lo their logical order. The most Important idea in the text ap pears as the first point in the "Better Grades" Reader Service co Herald and News Box 941 Klamath Falls, Oregon Please send me copies of 30 DAYS TO BETTER GRADES at $1 each. Name Address City .1 .-. 3 1 V '-rsJ ,f , f"N- ; Ely Landau Sidney lumet Embassy Picturiir PAGE JA HERALD AND 14 New Astronauts Dream Of Moon Trip HOUSTON lUPD-America's 14 new astronauts dream of walking in the pock marked craters and through the dusty "seas" of the moon. Some will make it. others may fail along the way. But all asked for, and have been granted, the chance and for that, and that alone, time and circumstances will exact a pnee. A steep price, for the ti tle of "astronaut" does not come cheap. The 14 of them were jittery Funds Win Approval WASHINGTON (UPI) - A Senate bill authorizing $1,872,000 military construction in Oregon was reported by the Senate Armed Services Committee this week. , Authorizations Include $1,659, 000 for Portland International Airport and $213,000 for Kings ley Field at Klamath Falls. The House and Senate have passed different bills which must be' reconciled by a con ference committee. The Senate version would authorize con struction in excess of $1.6 mil lion. ' Money for actual construction would have to be provided in a separate bill. outline no matter where it ap pears in the text. The following is the recom mended way to construct an outline: 1 1.1 1.2 2 2.1 2.11 ' 2.12 This type of outline labels the ideas. Anything marked "1.1" must be directly related to the main idea, or "1.". In the same way, anything marked "l.ll" is directly subordinate to "1.1". The items don't have to be paired off in a reading outline. In w r i t i n g outlines it's good form to pair off each item if you have an item "a." you should also have an item "b." But in the sample outline above, "2.1" can stand without any "2.2." If you find only one sub ordinate idea under "2". there's State JEECW mum wumm JMJ.i TTC7T. NEWS, Klamath Falls. Oregon and not a little shaken Friday when they sat behind a long ta ble on a stage in their lirst public appearance as spacemen elect. But that was the easy part listening as their names were read into history books: Air Force Maj. Edwin E. Al drin Jr., 33, El Lago (Near Houston), Tex.; Air Force Capt. William A. Anders. 30, Albu querque, N.M.; Air Force Capt. Charles A. Bassett II. 31. Ed wards, Calif.; Navy Lt. Alan L. Bean, 31, Jacksonville, Fla.; Navy Lt. Eugene A. Cernan, 29, Monterey, Calif.; Navy Lt. Rog er Chaffee, 28, Fairborn, Ohio; Air Force Capt. Michael Col lins, 33, Edward. Calif., and R. Walter Cunningham, 31, civil ian, Van Nuys, Calif.; Air Force Capt. Donn F. Eisele, 33. Kirt land Air Force Base. N.M.; Air Force Capt. Theodore C. Free man. 33, Edwards, Calif.; Navy Lt. Cmdr. Richard F. Gordon Jr., 34, Monterey, Calif.; Rus sell L. Schweickart, 28. Lexing ton, Mass.; Air Force Capt. Da vid R. Scott, 31, Edwards, Calif, and Marine Capt. Clifton C. Williams Jr., 31, Quantico, Va. Fame was theirs for simply having beeA picked as the cream of hundreds who went after the space jobs that came opeii last summer. With the ori ginal seven Mercury and nine Gemini pilots, they raised the number of U.S. astronauts lo 30 still an exclusive club. no reason to invent another. Notice that any entries into "1." and "2." must be of equal importance. The . entries in "2.11", "2.12", etc., must also be of equal' importance. As an example of a reading outline, we could outline today's article as follows: 1. Reading outlines are analy tical tools. 1.1 They organize ideas according to logical order not according to order of presentation. 1.11 Different from writing outlines. 1.111 Ideas are labeled. 1.112 Ideas don't have to be paired tiff. (Next: An advanced analyti cal tool the summary.) Starts WHAT EVER IIAPPENEDTd BABVJflHEf IPS f 132L Bette Davis and THIS, IN ITS OWN . TERRIFYING WAY, IS A LOVE STORY. 4-i, ;j.,,i.iaaMaraa jcn icmmon 3rd ice ncmiCK in "DQYS OF WillC aitD ROSCS" Ievumts jck . Sunday, October 20, 1963' Mme.Nhu Scolded By Father LINCOLN, Neb. (UPH- Dr. Dr. Tran Van Chuong, father of South Viet Nam's Mme. Ngo Dinh Nhu. said Saturday he does not intend to meet with her "until she is sincere and stops playing comedy." Chuong, here to address an Asian offairs conference at the University of Nebraska, said his chief concern is "the affairs of my country" and not the ut terances or' activities of his daughter, who is touring the United States. Chong, who resigned his am bassadorship' from South Viet Nam to the U.S. last August, said the present South Viet Nam government has "alienat ed the people." "Victory is Impossible under the present regime," he said. Asked if American reporters were accurately reflecting con ditions in his country, Chuong said: "I pay tribute to your report ers. They' are doing a wonder ful job under trying conditions . . . it is completely untrue that these are frustrated newsmen. They are doing a good job." Jones Act Supported WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Senate Commerce Committee Friday reported out favorably a proposal to suspend for an ad ditional two years Jones Act restrictions to permit continua tion of west coast lumber ship ments to Puerto Rico. Sen. Maurine Neuberger, D Ore., said the measure was placed on the Senate calender. An , amendment introduced last session by Mrs. Neuberger expires Oct. 24. It permits the use of foreign flag vessels to ship lumber to Puerto Rico. The Jones Act requires the use of American flag vessels for American shippers in cargo movements in , inter coastal wa ters. Crash Victim Dies At Bend BEND (UPD - Mrs. Harold E. Griffin, 20, Bend, died at St. Charles Memorial Hospital here today of injuries suffered in a traffic collision Thursday near here. State Police said the woman's car struck a cattle truck and trailer as she drove from a sideroad onto a highway. OPINS TONITi 12:45 TODAY! Joan Crawford