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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 26, 1963)
"V. HEAUT T Q MFI P I hntA Lodge No. 1247 BPOE are buiy making arrangements for the Charity Ball Friday night, Dec. 6. Dancing will be from 9 p.m. to I a.m. at the Elks Temple. Part of the pro ceeds will go to help fill Santa's Pantry for the Christmas baskets that the Elks Lodge prepare each year for the less fortunate. Left to right are Bill Carter, treasurer; Joe Victor, esquire; Paul Whitman, chaplain; Bob Craig, exalted ruler; Walter Badorek, leading knight, and Oscar DeNault, loyal knight. Federal Funds Sought For Addition To School The Klamath County School District is seeking $94,277.65 in federal funds for construction of a tour-classroom addition to the Falcon Heights School. Do You ; Know about : HOMEOWNERS : INSURANCE? Provides quality protec tion . . . unusually broad, flexible coverage. Insures your home and its con tents against fire, other common hazards. Costs even less than standard homeowners policy. Inquire nou: Clem Lesucur Midland Empire INSURANCE AGENCY liHMI Main St. I'honr TU nil Mi Klhbln & C If m Leturur See O Friendly Jfc'JMf? i WSL- j When Buick builds a LeSabreBuick builds a high-priced car, IB K air W -B T V mm - ft.aisari . mm i.i iT.ii i Lots of cars arc in LcS.ihrc't price cla. hut (hat' where the resemblance ends. I-or instance: Docs anvbodv else in LcSahre s class treat sou to that gentle Buick ndc or impressive Buick performance and new gas economy ? No. And w ho cKc gives ou 15 inch wheels, finned aluminum front brakes, extra cushioning for middle-seat travelers, and separate heat ducts and controls for the rear seat.' Right again: Nobody in 1 eSabre's field but LcSahre. If all this makes sou think a LcS,.bre would look awfully SaPrC S nCIO PUI I.CJd'TC. Il HNS imtvi v-u inn ik a i e in your garatc. sou should see how nicely it fits a about it, of course: your Buick dealer. Who else1 nice i see SK YOUR 10CU aUTHOmZED BJICK WILSON WILEY BUICK CO.. $ IN i9M Buitk oMkuI cat y i; wwiiii yl.a. .M ran n V imiih hA c A resolution adapted by the County School Board authorizes Superintendent of Schools Cliff Robinson to f i 1 e an applica tion with the U.S. commission er of education requesting the United States government to aid in constructing the addi tion. The addition has been es timated to cost $1)4,277.65 and the application will be filed for that amount. Tiie money will lie sought under Public Law 815. The board is seeking to add four classrooms to the school and the addition will include equip ment, paved play area and sidewalks. Robinson was also author ized to provide the federal gov ernment with the necessary documents to support the appli cation. Damage Light As Autos Hit Two autcmcbilts collided while negotiating turns at Bris tol Avenue and Summers Lane about 8 a.m., Thursday, result ing in miner damage to the ve hicles and no injuries to the motorists, Oregon State Police have reported. Cited for making an improper lelt turn was Mrs. Fred A. Schumann. 3H31 Crest Street, who was turning frcm Bristol Avenue onto Summers Lane when the car she was operat ing struck a vehicle driven by Harold J. Daniels. 4258 Bristol. The latter was turning cnto Bristol from Summers Lane at the time o! the accident, police said. Good Housekeeping JO L Li 'iJWMjnwitiSS NEED MORE BE SAID? jMOMPaaiitliiiilVi r. DCAlH urH0:ZlD BUICK DIALERS IN THIS Wy i Thiiiti."H Etr 0" NBC-TV. Jocoby On Bridge NORTH U WS VQJ10 AJJ 4ltS4 WEST EAST 4AQ107J 5 V32 V43 1084 465 AQ KJ107J SOUTH (D) A KM AK9S7 KQJT 1 North and South vulnerable Sooth Writ Nortk Eut IV 1 A 2 V Pasa 4 V Pais Pus P&u Opening leid V 2 No Play Sometimes n.v OSWALD JACOBY Newspaper Enterprise Assn. With certain card combina tions there is no right play. You just have to guess. For one such combination there are probably live or six where there is a right play and maybe two or three wrong plays. South's jump to four hearts was quite sound and if West had opened anything but a trump South should have had very little trouble witli his con tract, but oponents aren't al ways cooperative. West did open the deuce of trumps. South won in dummy and promptly led a spade to h i s king. West grabbed his ace and led a second trump, lie got in again to lead a third trump and South wound up losing three spades and a club, his con tract and his partner's esteem. It seems that South had found a way to go w rong at trick one. He should have won the first trick in his own hand and led a spade toward dummy's jack. Once South made that play the defense would have been help less. If West rose with the queen there would have been no need to ruff a spade. South would have developed a sure spade trick while if West played low dummy's jack would have been a winner. Of course, South pointed out that the lead toward the jack would not have done him any good if East had the queen of spades, but in that case there was no w inning play at South's disposal. With the cards placed as they were the lead toward dummy had to win. To get your copy of Oswald Jacoby's "Win at Bridge," just send your name, address, and 50 cents to: Oswald Jacoby Header Service, care this news paper, P.O. Box 489, Dept. A, Radio City Station, New York 19. N Y. Q The bidding has been: South Wert North East Pasa 1 Pass Pass 3 Pass 2 V ? You, South, hold: 4A2 VAKJ5 43 AQJ987 What do you do now? A Bid three spade. Ton want to surrest a slam without r o i n K past three -no-trump. Tour partner won't pan. TODArS QUESTION Your partner continues with a bid ot three no-trump. What do you do now? Answer Tomorrow and puts a low price on it J- - i..i.i . -wuiu I o - iuii . budget. You know who to Above all, it's a Buick U . 1330 MAIN STREET 10 - 11 10 I m IS f. Thnb!,- Otr . 1 Congress Returns To Busy Schedule WASHINGTON tl'PK - Con gress swung back into its leg islative business today from the tragedy-marred weekend of President Kennedy's assassina tion. But the Senate and House planned only two days of work before recessing for the Thanks giving holidays, and their legis lative goals remained un changed pending word from President Johnson. That word is expected Wednesday when the new Pres ident will address a joint ses sion of Congress at 12:30 p.m. EST. The general expectation is that he will plea for an end to "hale" talk and embrace the Kennedy program in a general way. The Senate is expected to de feat today or Wednesday a measure by Rep. Karl E. Mundt, R-S.D.. that might doom the late President's pro posal to sell surplus American wheat to Russia. By a vote of 8 to 7. the Sen ate Banking Committee Mon day recommended against pas sage of the measure but sent it to the floor. It would prohibit the government from under writing loans for the expected 5250 million grain deal. The Soviet I'nion wants to buy the wheat for 25 per cent down with 18 months to pay the balance. Commercial banks are reported unwilling to extend such credit without government guarantee. Few legislators claimed to be able to read the thoughts of the new Johnson administration and without such foresight, the House is set to clean up work it expected to do before Dec. 20 and adjourn. That work started today with the scheduling of action on a so-called continuing resolution, which would authorize through December Treasury disburse ments for the eight agencies and programs whose funds for the I1W3-64 fiscal vcar have not been appropriated. Tl'ESDAY ntlOSKVKLT SCHOOL PTA, 7:30 p.m.. open house, auditor ium. Child care provided. WEDNESDAY LOOM, 7.30 p.m., rifle shoot, Moose Home. club GOLDEN AGE CLLB, 1 p.m., regular meeting, Klamath Audi torium. SOJOURNERS, 12:30 p.m., luncheon, cards, Willard Hotel. Newcomers welcome. MANZA.MTA CHAPTER, OES. 8 p.m.. Thanksgiving meeting, Scottish Rite Temple. All OES members invited. Recreation Program Evaluated Two representatives of the Oregon Association of Health, Physical Education and Recre ation were in Klamath Falls last week to evaluate the city Parks and Recreation Depart ment . Similar departments through out the state are being studied by the association in prepara tion Cor the presentation of the association's annual award to one department. Inspecting the Klamath Falls department were Dr. Lynn Rod r.ey, chairman of the recrea tion msnagement curriculum. 'University of Oregon; and Ed ward Slczak, associate profes sor, chairman of the education recreation curriculum, Oregon State University. j;j Communitij. j dalendar THANKSGIVING DINNER SPECIALS DINNER COMMENCES AT 5 P.M. CHILDREN WELCOME TILL 9 P.M. FOR RESERVATIONS CALL TU 4-4556 DANCING TO THE "REJECTS" 9 P.M. 2 A.M. Rttarvationi trt olio bm tf data you dflirt. All appropriation bills except loreign aid have passed the House, but seven others Agri culture. State - Justice - Com merce, independent oft ices, leg islative. District of Columbia, public works and military' con struction still require Senate or other action. The foreign aid money hill is hanging fire until the Senate and House authorization bills (or the program and the Peace Corps arc completed. The for eign aid money issue may le the last big Hap of the session. Tax Drive Expected As Before WASHINGTON' 1 1' PI iSenate veterans felt today there would be no slackening under Presi dent Johnson of the drive for congressional passage of the biggest tax cut program in his tory. The St I billion tax reduction bill, passed Sept. 23 by the House, is stalled in the Senate Finance Committee until next year. At the very minimum. Senate observers c.Xwt Johnson to urge the tax-writing panel to catch up on the few days it has lost and finish public hearings on the "new frontier" bill be fore Congress quits tliis year. "He's a get-it-done sort of fel low," said Sen. Russell B. Long, La., who holds a key spot as second-ranking Demo crat on the finance group. "I expect Johnson to lay an ambitious program before Con gress Wednesday. I suppose he will want the Kennedy program passed. My guess is that he is going to keep us here and ask us to work." This doesn't mean the Sen ate will pass tax cuts this year for every American taxpayer and corporation. Backers of the ! tax bill, unable to blast it out of the committee headed by Chairman Harry F. Byrd, D Va., abandoned hope weeks ago for final action this session. It does mean that Johnson, a master practitioner of the "art of the possible" when he was Senate Democratic leader, may persuade Byrd to complete as much work on the bill as pos sible before the 1964 election year. Cambodia Linked With China TOKYO (UPI I - Cambodia, which renounced all United States aid, has signed an air lines service agreement with Communist China, according to a Peking broadcast by the offi cial New China News Agency iNCNAi. The Communist report said the agreement was signed in Phnom Penh Monday following negotiations which began two weeks ago. It was effective immediately, the broadcast said. Tlie agreement will give Chi nese aircraft direct access to neutral Cambodia, which has a key location in troubled South east Asia, directly south of Laos between Thailand and Viet Nam. Cambodian chief of slate Prince Norodom Sihanouk re nounced all U.S. economic and military aid last week, charg ing that the United States was backing a Cambodian rebel group operating out of South Viet Nam. The aid had totaled more than $:'.0 million this year. He has denied that he plans to replace American aid with help from Red China. A state ment from Cambodia last week said aid would be received from France. LOG Ashland Hwy. tn far Chriitrnat and Ntw HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath i- ..-.'-.-"' ,- .,:."TiiV.,!'Jfw. - l 5 ... 1 .. ' .-' . 'rM Y IK- it HIGH LEVEL CHAT Russia's First Deputy Anastas I. Mlkoyan I left I has a questioning look in his eye as he receives a warm handshake Monday from President Johnson. Translating in the center it USSR's ambassador to the U.S. Anatoly F. Dobrynin. UPI Telephoto Mikoyan Carries Message To LBJ From Khrushchev MOSCOW lUI'D - Anastas Mikoyan, Soviet first deputy premier, will use his current Washington trip to give Presi dent Johnson an oflicial mes sage from Premier Nikila S. Khrushchev, informed sources said today. Diplomats speculated that Khrushchev may be seeking a meeting with Johnson to size up the new President. ' Apparent apprehension of the Kremlin toward tlie future pol icy of the United States has emerged clearly in statements Connolly Views TV DALLAS (UPH - Gov. John B. Connally, wounded when President Kennedy was assas sinated, sat up in bed Monday and watched tlie martyred president's funeral on televi sion. It was a personal loss for Connally, who did not know that Kennedy was dead until the following day. Connally was a friend of the Chief Executive and had served as his first sec retary of the Navy. The governor sent his 17-year-old son John Jr. to repre sent him at the funeral. His wife, Nellie, stayed with him at the hospital. Connally was rapidly recover ing and Dr. Thorn Shires, chief surgeon at Parkland Memorial Hospital, said he is in excellent condition. Shotgun Blast Hurts Youths ST. HELENS il!PH - Four young persons were struck but not seriously injured by shotgun pellets Sunday night on a farm near Warren. Sheriff Roy Wil burn said today. A sheriff said Ray Buck, who lives at the farm, reported he had been bothered recently by persons fooling around his barn. Tlie sheriff quoted Buck as say ing he lired alter a car with a shotgun. Sheriff Wilburn said a group of young persons in a conver tible told him tliey had gone to the residence to look for a friend but left alter deciding they did not know anyone there. No charges had been filed. SPECIALS Turkey & Dressing Baked Horn Real Swedish Meat Balls Prime Rib For Dessert: Homemade pumpkin pie & mince pie ED MILLER CHEF CABIN TU 4-4556 Ytar'i partial. Call early to get Fills. Oregon Tuesday, November 26, 1963 of Soviet news media and com mentators. "Political observers are guess ing about the role to be played by Die new President," Tass, the official Soviet news agency, said in a dispatch Monday. "Will he freeze the diplomatic position of the United States, or will he develop it and in what direction?" Moscow Radio announced Monday night that Johnson sent messages to Khrushchev and Soviet President Leonid Brezh nev thanking them for their condolences on President Ken nedy's death and pledging to continue the Into President's ef forts to improve relations with the Soviet Union. Russian leaders were be lieved concerned over John son's Texas background, which in the eyes fo the Kremlin may make him more susceptible than Kennedy to right-wing pressures. neK)rts reaching Moscow in dicated Johnson is likely to ap point most of his own advisers, including sonic from Terns. ' "! ..1'": tW ' fcajajM5pa; ' jf ., i "mWicia.il., i , 8J I li I ii laaamimiii i iiiiiiiMaaiaMaiicaaaiaM!lrf -ju.. lie the proud owner or Honor of Gamr and Lakf. Lanerosii ahirts! They're known tlie world-over for their unusual color Mends consiating of six and even seven color-dyed wool yarns. These shirts are subtle to the eye and have that wonderful canlimere linnd, so soft to the touch. Feather-light and waihahle, thry are practical the year 'round especially for leisure wear indoors and oo" out. All siira ... in the unique Laneroisi Artist XO colors and patterns. Easy To Buy - Just Say Charge If At DEiEiWS Manstore 733 Main and Town and Country GOP Must Reappraise 1964 Campaign Plans WASHINGTON il'PH - Re publican leaders began taking a wary look at President John son today to see how his policies might affect their campaign and presidential choice in lt. Sen. Barry Goldwater of Ari zona, who is not an announced candidate, is still judged the man in front in terms of po tential delegate strength at the Republican National Conven tion. He has said he would make a decision in January whether to become a candidate for live presidential nomination. He now may delay that decision because of reappraisals coming up inside the GOP. Tlte Republicans must begin to function under a new set of rules because they must pre pare to campaign against Jolin son instead of the late Presi dent Kennedy. Political Truce While the Johnson administra tion was being launclied. bow ever, some Republican leaders were w illing to declare a politi cal truce to cxiend beyond the Christmas holidays. If the Goldwater drive should fizzle, former Vice President Richard M. Nixon and Gov. Also Proof I' . V LQi ii Funnel 'BIB II''., Till Ifirn iimi iiMnJtnffT ri- Arlisl colors for your ivardrobe ALVitS and L AL'IS PAGE i William W. Scranton of Penn sylvania will get much atten tion as possibilities and Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller of New York can expect more. There is feeling evident in Republican circles here that an other man spoken of as a pos sibility, Gov. George Romney of Michigan, was badly hurt when his Republican dominated state legislature junked his tax program. In any case, the GOP will w atch the Johnson program un fold, beginning with his speech to a joint session of Congress Wednesday, and carry on a continuing re-examination of their own campaign prepara tions. South Is Power A typical appraisal recognizes that (lie South is at least one of tlie Goldwater bases of power both for national convention delegates and for electoral votes in the 14 presidential election. This Year Send PHOTOGRAPH Christmas Cards UNDERWOOD'S CAMERA SHOP Ph. TU 4-7063 we mean! NEW LOW PRICE Kentucky's Finest Bourbon for over f 50 years (CODE flSLC) (CODE J1I1-B Available BOTTLED IN BOND OlSrilLED AND BOTTLED SY WATCHFUL AND FRA2IER DISTILLfnV CO. JAROST0WN, MEIS0N COUNir, MflTUCKf aniitffUnlrniia nfrH