HELPED BLOOD PROGRAM Faculty members and students of Oregon Technical Institute have consistently aided the Red Cross blood program and this week received the American National Red Cross award commemorating the 1 00th Anniversary of the world-wide Red Cross movement in grateful recognition of distinguished service to humanity. OTI has participated in the on-campus blood program for the last nine years and placed second in the intercollegiate competition in Oregon in 1962. Four hundred ninety five pints were given in 1963. Dr. George Nicholson, left, presented the award to Jim Ericlcson, second from left, president of the sponsoring Circle K Club on campus. Second from right is Mickey Rutherford, student body president, and right is Julian Ager, faculty member. Lake County Chamber Told Farm Income Down Slightly LAKEVIEW - A preliminary estimate for 1963 of the Lake County agricultural income, presented at tle Monday lunch eon of the Lake County Cham ber of Commerce by County Agent Oris Rudd, showed the figures down about $49,000 from 19B2. The chamber group was observing Farm-City Week. The estimate of the total for this year was $5,352,591. The livestock total is $3,300,000, broken down as follows: Beef (including cull dairy cows', $4, 835,000; dairy, $90,000; hogs, $11,000; sheep, $241,000; wool, $68,000; poultry, $28,000; bees, rabbits, furs, etc., $7,000. In the farm crops total of $817,000 are included wheat, $332,000; oats, $38,000; barley, $365,000; potatoes, $1,500; fruits and vegetables. $2,500. The soil bank, ACP, and in Use Our Loyowoy PLASTIC DRAPES Suoer wide . . . $ A 1 144-lnches wide fully lined. ff TOYS! d Ms It's the wonderful world of KL3 Mf toys ot Bon Bazaar . . . Q Ssi i t h more kiddies-woweri jjj1 rrrlving daily. Shop early TfKLlaT .J4- while the selection is good. & I USE OUR flT I LAY- 3 AWAY ' H kKW 7-TUBE j &0 RADIO I j&ijr 8 was all they would let us have J? Tf to sell ot this low price! ?j if Reg. 59.95' jf I S By DeForest of California. Interesting 1 1 if shapes and col- JBSk. i f 1 ors . . . Assort- pR1CES f Of K . ... til centive payments totaled $235, 591. The soil bank payments were $102,000; shorn wool in centive, $21,013; lamb incentive, $6,578; ACP regular program, $48,000: and special flood dam age, $57,000. Beef, basically the principal source of agricultural income, was down about $17,000, while numbers increased somewhat. Sheep numbers have decreased. Federal payments show an in crease because of the special flood damage program. Listed were the trends in ag riculture for 1963 as stated by the U.S.D.A. Outlook. There were fewer and larger farms, with the total number down 25 per cent between 1954 and 1959; larger capital investment, up three-fold since 1950; increase production efficiency, labor inputs down by one-third while ond Revolving Charge BAN ROLL-ON DEODORANT 98 Reg. 98c plus tax 83 output per man-hour has dou bled since 1950 w ith mechaniza tion largely responsible. The increased use of fertiliz er and machinery is noted in replacing land and labor. The per capita personal income of farm population is going up, but income from non - farm sources accounts for one-third, and farm population is decreas ing. Meat consumption is up 10 per cent since 1930, while con sumption of crops for food is s t a b e since that year. Con sumption of crop9 for non-food use is down, with cotton and wool subject to competition from synthetics. Farm exports are up in value and volume, with government programs accounting for 33 per cent of the total agriculture ex ports in 1962. The consumer Early . Bir d Buys AT THE BON BAZAAR BOXED CHRISTMAS CARDS No. 2005 and No. 2006. Mfg. Re tail Price, $1.25 & $1.50. Many other good buys in other Christmas Cards. NEW ASSORTMENT HAMON HANDCRAFTED GLASS CRACKLE GLASS 98' And Up Vases, Pitchers & Other LUSTRE CREME - HAIR RINSE Reg. 1.09 PLUS TAX JUST BOXED $ TOWELS From 1 QUAKER LACE TABLE CLOTH Round, square, rectangular l C plus tax 4480 South 6th on African Bloc May Press For Economic Sanctions UNITED NATIONS. NY. (L'Pli The 32-nation African bloc may demand a special General Assembly session in January to press for economic and political sanctions against Stafe Plans To Award Road Jobs SALEM (UPI Bids on sev cral projects, including -two of more than $3 million, were opened by the State Highway Commission Tuesday. Contracts will be awarded Friday. Slate-Hall of Portland bid , 512,034 for the Siskiyou Station Siskiyou Summit section of the Pacific Highway in Jackson County. Roy I,. Houck Sons' Corp., Salem, bid $3,124,394 for the Sutherlin . Winchester section of tlie Pacific Highway in Doug las County. Other bids included: Rrnton & I. Inn Willamette River bridge section in Corval lis; Inland Construction Co.. Milwaukie, $353,290. Deschutes Horse Ridge sum mit section of Central Oregon Highway; Groesbeck - Durbin, Eugene, $458,209. I Bend traffic signals; Steeck Electric Co., Medford, $4,782. Gilliam Thirtymile Creek Dyer Creek section of John Day Highway; Rogers Construc tion, Portland, $707,795. Lake Dry Creek road-California State ine section; J.C. Compton Co., MeMinnville, $81,. 178. I.ane Laura St. - Mohawk road section of Eugene-Springfield Highway; Slate-Hall, Port land, $996,220. Linn Foster toll creek sec tion of Santiam Highway; Sax-ton-Stevenson, Salem, $58,520. Withdrawn were bids for Roseburg traffic signals in Douglas County. price indexes were holding stea dy, with the farmer's share of the food dollar stable to down. A9 AND OTHERS Shapes 77: tax Reg. 1.00 VALUE r rivals BOXED PILLOW $ CASES (Dan River) 2 98 I up I Imported Damask TABLE CLOTH & NAPKIN SETS Whit & Pastel Colors 5 98 up Low, Low Prices PLUS laz South Africa and Portugal, dip lomatic sources said today. The Africans are talking about such a session in the event tlie Security Council fails to act this month on their demand for firm action to end racial segre gation in South Africa and Por tuguese colonial rule in Angola. Security Council action ap pears doubtful, since the United States and Britain oppose the idea of sanctions and both have veto power in Ihe 11-nation council. The Africans, with Asian backing and tlie support of the Communist bloc, could expect a majority in a General Assembly vote on the issue. The Ill-nation General As sembly voted 89-0 Tuesday to begin studies on making Latin America a nuclear-free zone. Cuba, the Soviet Union and most of the Communist bloc abstained. Communist Romania voted in favor of the lOpower Latin American resolution, how ever. Cuba said it would agree to Ihe plan only if tlie United States promised to keep nu clear weapons out of the Pana ma Canal zone and Puerto Ri co, and to give up its Guantana mo Naval Base on Cuba soil. Some diplomats doubted that the Africans would find support for a special General Assembly session in January because it would raise cmbarrasing finan cial questions that many dele gates are reluctant to tackle at this time of relative East-West amity. Ei-hard Slates Three-Day Visit WASHINGTON UPI- West German Chancellor Ludwig Er hard arrives in Washineton Sun day for a three-day visit, his lirst since he took over last month from Konrad Adenauer. Erhard will be accompanied by Foreign Minister Gerhard Schroeder and Defense Minister Kai-Uwe Von Hassel. He w 1 1 1 confer with President Kennedy "several times" on a wide range of topics, that Stale Dc partment said. .-VEZZJ 1 .r WOODBURY DRY FORMULA SHAMPOO 16.3 Fl. Oz. JUST wuiq BOXED SHEETS $ 95 . .... . m & PILLOW CASES U up (Dan River) M 4 98 up Green Stamps all all 11 Next to Oregon Feed HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath llM.jMMMaapMapaapMWWePPM ii mwmmmSM ll'iTsVyEtti CUBA'S PRICE TAG Carlos Lechuga Hevie, right, Cuban Ambassador to the UN, listens closely to debate on denuclearization of Latin America during session of UN Political Committee. The committee, with Soviet Bloc and Cuba abstaining, voted 89-0 to initiate study for malting Latin America a nuclear free lone. Cuba demanded that the U.S. keep nuclear weapons out of the Panama Canal Zone and Puerto Rico, give up the U.S. Naval Base at Guantanamo Bay on Cuban soil as Cuba's price for participating in the plan. UPI Telephoto Top Red Answers McNamara MOSCOW (UPD-A top Rus sian missile general lias urged Defense Secretary Robert Mc Namara and other U.S. officials "to give up their atomic black mail and threats against tlie Socialist world" or face the consequences, Moscow Radio said today. It quoted Col. Gen. Vladimir Tolubko, first assistant com mander of Soviet strategic rock et forces as saying: "... American soil would be come the tlieater of military operations from tlie very first minute of any war imposed on us." (In a speech to the Economic Club In New York last Monday, McNamara said tlie West is vastly superior, to the Soviet bloc in terms of nuclear weap ons. He also said the West has more men under arms and a much more substantial indus trial base than the Communist bloc.) Tolubko was quoted as tak ing issue with McNamara's re marks "about America's sup posed nuclear supremacy." The Russian said: "... I would once again like to recall a remark by (Soviet) Defense Minister Marshal (Ro- dlon) Malinovsky that we will retaliate for the number of mis siles threatening us with a si- multaneous salvo of several times the number of missiles, and by such powerful nuclear explosions that they will really wipe off the face of the earth all the installations and indus trial and administrative centers of the U.S.A., and completely wipe out the countries that have allowed their soil to be used for American war bases." Tolubko said McNamara's "boasts" were meant for prop aganda and to "soothe" tlie American public and those in the West who "are learning ever mora frequently about the failures of American missile and noclcar rocket tests." Tolubko claimed that Russian strategic missiles have no range restrictions and can carry ther mo nuclear warheads of colos sal strength. He also claimed no limit to the destructive pow er of these missiles. RADAR PROTECTION WASHINGTON (UPIl-Ninety per cent of the airspace over the continental United - States now gets high altitude radar collision protection. The Federal Aviation Agency IFAA) said Monday this was accomplished last week when the Miami, Fla., air route traf (ic control center was added to the area "positive control" pro gram. This program monitors all flights above 24,000 feet with modern radar. -Br CLAY Vour Oo'fy According To develop message for Friday, read words c3r responding to numbers or your lodioc .f uutlrt I MAY 21 ID 'l fc,k 3 You 4TW.I SAn Shjl4 7AiMtt sr. j"tnhl IOH.b 11 'IIP 12 Yt,., 130" UAy I5K..0 16 I 17n IS from If Trnot4 JO Oo-fl 2IO) 22 Think 21 U 24 TK 25 ' it tin. 27 Yu 2gOnMny 29Min4 JOfcMlun.'. Oi12.lM4.30 OIMIM MAY 12 Y IUNC M 1.1A.10.1AI 40-48 81 87 CANCH f3 luM u lt707Mi-H uo AUt 111 J) J-3I VMOO 7 A AUO. 31 5Mor MS-33-30.Jt1 fo Falls, Oregoo Thursday, November 21. 196$ Industrial Nations Urged To Step Up Foreign Aid PARIS UPD A top Ameri can foreign aid expert Wednes day called on tlie world's major industrial nations to step up their help to newly developing countries. The appeal was made by Wil lard L. Thorp, chairman of the Development Assistance Com mittee (DAC) of tlie Organiza tion for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECDi. Thorp addressed the OECD Council of Ministers as it re viewed foreign aid efforts by leading industrial nations. Thorp disclosed that total aid to developing countries by OECD member states in 1962 totaled only $8.4 billion com pared with $8.65 billion in 1961. Energetic Steps Thorp urged that energetic steps should be taken to encour age foreign investors in develop ing countries, The United States is still the largest giver of foreign aid. In 19(2, according to OECD fig ures, the United States came first with $3.6 billion, followed by France $996 million, West Here Are Tuition Fees For Biggest Institutions SALEM (UPI I -Here are the tuition fees presently paid by students at (lie three biggest in stitutions in the state system of higher education the Univer sity of Oregon, Oregon Stale University, and Portland State College. Undergraduate resident stu dents $330 per year. Undergraduate out of slate students $330 per year. Graduate students, resi dent end oct-of-state $300 per year. , There are about 33.000 stu dents in tlie system. Of these 3,353 are graduate students. About one-fourth of the gradu ate students, using available es timates, received funds of all or part of their tuition, and sometimes payments, as gradu ate f e 1 1 o w s or assistants in teaching. Proposals call for i dollar in crease in tuition next summer or fall that would apply to resi dent and out-of-state undergrad uate and graduate students. Presently estimated revenues and needs set the increas at Pope Puts Bishops First VATICAN CITY (UPll-Pope Paul VI, in an apparent rebuke to tlie Roman curia aimed at breaking a logjam in Ecumeni cal Council debate, told his gen eral audience today that bish ops have "first place" in the H POLLAN- Activity Curd1 M to tn Start. ' 1-14.11.38' M-50-M Vr birth sign. SI for 2CrtA S3 Luck 44 R.ody oSl.".' St H..I 67 (Kit (A A 65x1. 70ScrM 71 l 72 SWtr 73 lik.ly 74 nndi 75Youl 76MiiMt 77 Win 71 01 7You SOTooHy SI G'Ml I3we'ffc S3MW 14 Allo.n) SSAMut tnCanfcet 7 (innneiol II Limit!" StH KOI'19 OCT. J4fy. NOV 23 VVj (22-25.77.52 EJ.6265 IWITTAUUt NOV 2 t mc n (a 15.1723-26 AT U3-4.87-881, CAWCOtN JAN 30 IrL 51-5S-M-&37C- h I.77.79-UCA3; AeUAUUI JAN ,1 30.J1-W.4jyC. 47.72-73 K men UAlllI - mo-: 07-41-74 3 Id 32A.oy 33 Irtltfvt, 34 HOB..A.U 35 You 37 W.i. 3 CooluMn 3 VV.ll 40 Pmwtwu) 41 W1hil 42 And 43 W.ih 44 lo. 45frm 46 In 47 Th. 41 Of 49Yjf S0Conll1 51 Sem. 52o.l 53 DrudgfV 54 A 55To4ov SSSmuI 57 You ;sc.ii PAGE 7B Germany third with $427 mil' lion. Britain fourth with $417 million, and Japan fifth with $163 million. Thorp said studies by DAC In- dicated more can be done in the foreign aid field. Should Aid Development He said tlie big industrial na tions should not merely hand out aid funds but also should help tlie developing countries adapt themselves so they can solve their own economic prob lems. U.S. Undersecretary of State Georgo V Ball and Japanese Minister of State Kiichi Miya zawa voiced satisfaction that OECD is trying to step up work in the foreign aid field, The council also agreed that some sort of common man. power policy should Ibe worked out by OECD member nations, It heard reports on problems stemming from migration of manpower from agriculture into industry in many countries. The two-faced OECD session was ending this afternoon with a pledge to step up held to de veloping countries. about $105 per year for all cate gories. Students at smaller colleges in the stale system are charged ilightJy smaller tuition fees. The cost per student at the undergraduate level is about $900. The $330 fee for nonresident graduate students does not ap ply to the Medical and Dental schools In Portland. Nonresi dents at these schools pay $1, 113 per year while residents al so pay higher fees, $705 per year. Regarding law and architec ture schools at Oregon and the engineering school at Oregon State, for example, a higher education spokesman said non residents can qualify for the $330 per year fee if they get a bachelor's degree and then pay the higher nonresident fee Normally It takes five years to get a bachelor's degree in architecture. Tlie $330 nonresident graduate fee normally applies to such courses as the liberal arts field, music and education. hcirarchy of the Catholic Church. The Pope's comment was merely a restatement of long standing Catholic belief, but tlie fact that he chose to emphasize it at this particular lima was regarded here as highly signifi cant. The Ecumenical Council has recently been tied up in a lengthy debate over a proposal which asserts that bishops share with the Pope in the gov ernment of the church. Conservative council fathers, particularly those in the Ro man curia, have attacked tlie proposal, claiming that it threatens the doctrine of papal supremary. Pope Paul met with council leaders last week to discuss logjam resulting from the fact the theological commission has refused to write tlie pro posal Into a document on tlie church, despite the fact the council fathers approved it in principle in a test vote. Ever eince that meeting, ob servers have been looking for some sign of papal intervention in the matter. Today's speech appeared to be it. It has been estimated there are about 1,800 known asteroids. LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE Of SALE Notice It hereby olven that th un- dtnigrttd, Sheriff of Klcmatft County, urgon, pursucnr to an ordtr of im County Court of Klmlh County, Or gon, de)td on tn iirt day of Novtm br, 193. will on ih 17th ay of De cember, 143, AT THE HOUR OF TEN o clock in mo feronoon of Mid day. t lh front door of th County Court rteuM Mi Kltmttr Ffli, ortgon. Mil for cash tho rtal property horemeffer described, for the turn of not lest then the mount Ml out In each ot th Moerett perctlt hereinafter de scribed, wtii being the minimum price ei Mt by the Mid County Court. ine Mia property i 0 tier, bed t fol low, to-wit; Lots 7. 1 end II in Block 39. gua na Viite Addition to Klamath Falls; alio vacated portion of Oregon Avenue adjoining,- Code t. Map 3314, Tax Lot IIOOO.OO. Lots 3 and s in Block X, Dixon Ad dition to Klamath Falls; Code 1, Map 3U2. Tax Lot i. WOO 00. t 3 in Block of First Addition to Kiematti Fetiii Code 1, Map 3717. I lVI 4t S1IMU.W. Lots 1 through 10. Inclusive. In Block 4 of Industrial Addition to Klam ath Failn Coda I, Map 331, Tax Lot 43, 1 1 MM 00. Portion of Lot I In Secll-wi S. Town ship 3 S., Renga , E.w.M.i Code a. Map 4311. Ta Lot 2, 1 1 15 00 Lot 30 in Block 1 ot Stewart Addi tion to Klamath Fails; Code 7, Map 412, Tx Let J. 1300.00. Lot 21 In Block 2 of Stewart Addi tion to Klamath Falls; Code 7, Map 4612, Tax Lot 27, S300.00. Lot 11 In Block 4 of Stewart Add). tlon to Klamath Falls; Cod 7, Map in, i ax loi a?, ui.n, W S' of E 2V of Lot 10 In Block A Of Lennox Addition to Klamath Falls; code 7, Map 417. Tax Lot 3031, S25 00. Hfc'5E'4, w'jse'4 of sect on u- Townihip 34 South, Rang 7, E.W.M.; (.oae 3i, Map as. Tax tot 1.4, HMO. 00. if acre, being Dor t ion of the ne. NEU In Section 1, Township 40 South, Range t, E.W.M.. also described as Loli 11 and 12 in Block 3 of vacated South Midland, also S'i vacated Wash ington st. d oinmg, also N i vacated alley dolnlng; Cod 92, Map SI, Tax Lot a, 1 00. 4 06 acres In Section 24. Township 33 South, Range 9, E.W.M.i Cod SI. Map 77. Tax Lot $9, J 1275 00. 44 acres, beina the SE"NW'i of Section 1, Township 23 South, Rang 10, E WAV; Cod 51, Map VI, Tax Lot 2, WOO, 00. acres, being the of Section 34. Township 23 South. Rang 10. E.WM i Cod 51, Map 91. Tax Lot 49. 1600.00. 40 crs being the NWUNWV& of Section U, Township 76 South, Rang 10, E.W.M.; Cod St. Map 94, Tax Lot 7, 1400.00. II acre belna a rwtlnn of LM 11 In Section 14, Township 3 South, Range 10, E.W.M.i Cede t, Mia Ifli. Tex Lot 9S. S5000. ,u acre being portion of SEUSW'4 ' Section 34, Township 36 South Range 14. E.W.M.i Cod a Map 10 Tax Lot 176, $35 00. loi a in Block 3 Of North Biy Addi tion to Bly, Oregon; Cod $, Map ISO. Tax Lot 241, $70.00. Lot In Block 1 of Trwllllgr Addi tion to Merrill, Oregon; Coda 14, Map 901, Tax Lot 17, S17J5.00. Portion of Trt 26 In Independence Tracts Addition to Klamath Falls; Code 41, Map 45JC, Tax Lot 27, 115.00. 10 acres being Iht WltNWtt In Sec tion 36, Township 31 South, Range 11, E.W.M.i Cod 36, Map 125, Tax Lot 131, SfrOO.OO. All of said croptrty being In Klam ath County. Oregon. Don and dated (hit 12 day of No vember, 1963. J. M. Brltton, Sheriff Klamath County, Oregon No. 439. Nov. 14, 21. 28, Dec. 5, 1963. To Place Your WANT AD Phone TU 4-8111 FUNERAL HOMtS C W0'S Kl,mith Funtril Homt. ti5 High StrMt, TU 2-04 MEETING NOTICES 1 SPECIAL roMri avc CALVARY COMMANDERY No. 16 Knights Templar, Sotv Nov. 23. Will confer the Orders of Red Cross and Malta starting Ot 2 p.m.; 6:J0 nc-hest dinner ot Kingfolls Cafe followed by the Order of the Temple. All Sir Knights urged to attend. IG. H. Hill, Eminent Commander SPECIAL COMMUNICATION Crater Lake Lodge No. 21 1 AF & AM. Thurs day, November 2 1 st, 7:30 p.m. Work In M.M. Degree. All Mas ter Masons welcome. Thomas Barnes, W.M, LOST & FOUND BLOND Cocker (Mnlel "Blondl" lost. Nov. is, short clip, 4200 block on Gary Street. TU 7-?71. TU 4'4l. GINERAL NOTICES ALCOHOLICS Anenymoui meed Wed., St. nlghl, TU 2-S740, Bex 1065- PERSONALS 6 CINDY Hendenen Kulmen: Plaeie call Karl at enc. Urgent. In tufltne or at homt. LICENSED horn lor aged, ipeelal diet. penontl Interest enured, TU 2315. SHARE my horn, respectable poard er, room, peerd, laundry TU 2-3W-DOChrlitmas shopping from vour heme. Wetklnt Products, TU J-4115. KLAMATH Alcoholics Anenymoui, TU 4-3591, TU 4-B704. lull .1 .nyllm. BEGINNERS (lanon. H.l familial of alcoriolki, TU 4.71J, Bo IMJ. SERVICE! 10 PAINTING, wtllpaptrlnfl .1 ill blt, Inttrior, til.rlor. bruih r spr.y. re.- lon.bH pflcti. Ir, til , TU 1-3131. DlVesS mikTng nd .Itlratloni. til' work Ju.r.nlMO. TU J-M30. MfAT CUTTING Eiptrlenetd rtllrod miat cutttr will cut and wrap your meal, vary raaion- bia. TU 1-4)01. 611 N. ntn. HOUSE ramodallni, cablnat making, lurnllura llnlshlnp. TU 407. CUSTOM BUTCHERING At vaur plaea. dallvar to proeaulne plant ar laava. Al Sloll, TU 44116. LAND lavelinf, bulldoilng, tubMllinf, carryall work. O CAT, TU 3-47M. FIX-IT SHOP Wa Repair and Fl Anything Warlh Plxlng SAW FILING - BICYCLES TIC SHOPPING Gina's Tailor Shoo Tatleflng . aliarationt lor man, wom an, clilldren. All work guaranlead. Raaionabla Prlcaa Gtna's Man'i Waar $37 Main SEPTIC TANK CLEANING and INSTALLATION Llcantad Bonded Guaranteed C. W. CLIFFORD 1 SON TU 4-l4l 31 HilyanS Rose's Toiler Shop Complete Dreiimakinf Aitaratiant Tailoring Battt Button Holes Upholstering . SEWING LESSONS 356 DIVISION TU 2-6M2 HOWARD CLEANERS Knits t Drapes Specialty 7 a.m. to 6 p.m. Weekdays and Saturdays til East Main TU 4-til ONE HOUR "MARTINIZING" THE MOST IN PRY CLIANING DRIVE IN CLEANERS 2041 Rodcliffe ot So. 6th