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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 12, 1963)
PAGE A HERALD AND Snow And Freezing Rain Hit East, Major Storm Moves Into Rockies By United Press International Snow and freezing rain knifed into Ute East today and turned highways into slippery ribbons of death. Another major storm front moved down from the Rookies with winds of nearly 50 miles an hour. Eastern Churches Expert To Join Pope Pilgrimage VATICAN CITY (UPD-Top Vatican diplomats and experts on relations with Eastern churches will accompany Pope AT SHAWS YOUR CHOICE! Select the designs to rep resent you this Christmas from our wide assortment of Hallmark cards in con venient boxed assort ments. SHAW STATIONERY 729 Mom BABY GRAND PIANOS g 3 JjT MAKE MERRY 0 P"" TOTLOVE J l NITESYE J" ll 'TIL 9 IJnlKCOiiNr I'Rir-K ( "Widay fl(E SKEM NEWS, Klamath Fails, Oregon Heavy snow and hazardous driving warnings were posted from Pennsylvania to most o( downstat New York and New England. Wore than six inches of fresh snow were expected in New England by nightfall. Nine inches of new snow fell Paul VI on his pilgrimage to the Holy Land and a possible "summit" meeting with Ortho dox leaders, it was disclosed to day. The Vatican today released a list of persons who will travel to Palestine with the Pope Jan. 4-6. Their names seemed to con tradict at least partially the Vatican's contention that the trip is strictly a personal pil grimage, and indicated thai weighty contacts between churches may be expected. Traveling with the Pope will be his secretary ot slate, Am lcto Cardinal Cicognani and the three Assistant secretaries of state, Msgrs. Antonio Samoro, Angelo Dellacqua and Ernesto Camagni. Others will be Eugene Cardi nal Tisserant and Gustavo Car dinal Testa. The French-born Cardinal Tisserant is the dean of the Sacred College of Cardi nals and second in ceremonial rank only to the Pope. He is also an authority on the Orient. So is Testa, secretary of the Congregation for the Eastern Churches and a former apostol ic delegate to Palestine. f f i Serve HIGHLY HONORED Thursday, December 12, 1963 at DuBois, Pa., during the night. Philipsburg, Pa., had eight inches and Bradford, Pa., had seven. Five inches fell at Milwaukee, Wis., and Muske gon, Mich. In the frigid West, a fresh surge of arctic air swept down from the northern Rockies across the Great Plains, whip ping snow into the air and cut ting visibility. .Minot, N.D., was buffeted by winds Rusting at 46 m.p.h. to day. The mercury stood at 13 degrees above zero and visibil ity ranged from zero to a quar ter mile. Blizzard warnings, calling for winds up to 50 m.p.h., were is sued for a large area from the Dakota s down to Nebraska and Iowa and up into Minnesota and western Wisconsin. Gale warnings were posted for Lake Superior and sections of the New England coast. Highways from the Rockies to Pennsylvania were sheathed in ice and snow. A United Press International count showed at least 52 per sons dead in weather-connected accidents since the wintry storm hit the Great-Plains last weekend. Texas counted 8 dead, Indiana 7 and Illinois 6. Traffic on U.S. 77 south of Purccll, Okla., piled up four miles deep lale Wednesday night. Up to 5 inches of new snow fell in the pre-dawn hours in parts of tlie Great Lakes area and northern plains. Snow cov er across the northern portion of the nation ranged up to 10 inches. Temperatures continued to drop in the Rockies and down across the plateau. Joseph Hope Dies At Paisley LAKEVIKW Joseph Hope, 75, a Lake County resident since 1912, died on Dec. 7, at Paisley. Funeral services were held Thursday, Dec. 12, from the Ouslcy-Oslerman Chapel. JUn iiil was in Sunset Park Cemetery, with Rev. Lester Bouldon officiating and milita ry honors at the graveside. Mr. Hope was born Oct. 31, 18110, in Cumberland, England. Survivors Include Jack Hope of Paisley: a brother, J. W. Hope, in England, and three sisters, Mr Elizabeth Lamb, Mrs. An nie Cooper, and Mrs. Jtillie D.il tnn. all in England. He was a veteran of World War I. f 1 1 highly honored btcouse for more than half a century Crater Lake ice cream hoi set the standard by which all Ice creams are fudged. Crater Lake Is the ONLY ice cream made fresh for yon locolly ... by ice crcom makers who ere dedicated to producing the finest possible to make. Serve Crater Lake Ice creom ot oil those gov,' holiday parties BUFFALO FARE FOR MOOSE LODGE Mr. and Mrs. Webb Hescock observe 248 pounds of buffalo meat which will be the principal fare for members and guests of Moose Lodge 1 106 during a dinner at the lodge beginning 6:30 p.m., Saturday. The couple, accompanied by Clyde Hooper, drove to Montana where they obtained the meat after the organization was notified that it had been one of a number of groups entitled to a buffalo carcass. Each year the federal government holds drawings and seHs bufalo meat to the winners. Webb is the governor of the local lodge. Airmen Finish Test In 'Oxygen Box' SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (UP1 Four teen-age airmen emerged Wednesday from a slecl box and 30 days in an explosive at mosphere of pure oxygen, t h e longest known test of its kind. They underwent medical tests then relumed to their simulated space capsule for five more days of follow-up. Their condi tions were good. The test, part of a continuing series of experiments to find out man's reaction to space capsule environment, was sponsored jointly by live Air Force School of Aerospace Medicine at Brooks Air Force Base, and the Manned Spacecraft Center at Houston. The four airmen who breathed pure oxygen for .10 days were Jerry J. Huber, 18, of Hope, Mich.; Philip B. Jameson, 18; of Clearwater, Fla.; Thomas A. Husiccki, 19, of Niagara Falls, N.Y.and Ronald D. Taskcy, 19, of IWcstemville, N.Y., all air men 3.C. Two other airmen 3.C, George G. Vandall, 21, of 'Mil ford, Mass. and Gary L. .Mor rill, 18, of Eaton Rapids, Mich., stayed outside the capsule as controls. Doctors checked the condition of (lie four against conditions of the two to com pare effects. Dr. .Hilly E. Welch, chief of the school's environmental sys tems branch, said "The men are in fine shac and we are very liappy with the progress of the experiment." The men entered the capsule Nov. 4 and spent five days breathing normal air. They then broatlied oxygen through masks to piugc their ,i n a a a a a a a 10.98 SkM ia 'a a a ; a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a l a Oil, what a licniiiifiii morning in a toft quilted nylon robe The imulotion it of Kodtl polyeiUr fiberfill for moii. mum warmth. And they're washable, ef ceurie. Sites 10 through It. mil, r - in i in 1 : systems of nitrogen to avoid the bends, a painful malady caused by formation of nitrogen bub bles in the body fluids. The atmospheric pressure in the capsule was then reduced to that found at 27.500 feet and tlie capsule was flushed of all gases but oxygen. Normal air at sea level con tains about 78 per cent nitro Pauling Would Hand UN Control Of A-Weapons OSLO, Norway tUPD Nobel Peace Prize winner Dr. Linus C. Pauling urged Wednesday that the world's nuclear .powers place their nuclear weapons under control of the United Nations. Pauling, a professor at Cali fornia Institute of Technology, was awarded the Peace Prize for l!lfi2 in a ceremony here Tuesday. He outlined his pro posal m a lecture before the Nobel Institute. He said the United States, the Soviet Union, and smaller nu clear powers should agree to a system under which they could use nuclear weapons only with the approval of the United Na tions. "Even a small stop in the di rection of this proposal, national-international control, such as the acceptance of U.N. ob servers in the control stations of the nuclear powers, might decrease significantly the prob ability of nuclear war," he said. Pauling, who campaigned for 10.98 Hi gen, 21 per cent oxygen, 1 per cent argon, and minute quanti ties of carbon dioxide, hydro gen, neon, helium, krypton and xenon. Air Force doctors watched tlie men around the clock. Inside tlie 25-foot by 9-foot capsule, the men read, slept and performed routine tests on themselves. an end to nuclear testing, de scribed the test ban treaty as the first great step toward peace and said it could not have been "formulated and ratified except for the convic tion, determination, and politi cal skill of President Kennedy." Thieves Hit Pump Firm Oregon State Police began in vestigating at 8 a.m. Thursday the breakin ot tlie Interstate Pump Company, 7215 South Sixth Street, which occurred sometime during tlx? previous night. Ted Case, manager of t h e firm, told .police that burglars entered the building through a bathroom window at tlie rear of the building. A quick check of the premises indicated that ap parently nothing was taken, but the survey was continuing, Case said. Because she Van Raaltc . lace-lavished nylon tricot -4 Ntv"7'5 A WONDERFUL STORE jP $95 e. "Frivoleee" slip with front end beck bodice of lined Alencon nylon lace; sheer nylon end lece et hem. White, black, bei9.. Av. 32-42, ihert 32-36; tell (white only) 34-42 b. Opaque SueveHe nylon tricot slip with mbroidered sheer trim. White, pink. Av. 32-40, 5.95 Av. 444, 6.95; short (white only) 32-36, 5.95 e. Helf-slip; nylon tricol double sheer hem. Rose eppllque. White, send. Av. S, M, I; Short S-M. . .3.95 SHOP FRIDAY Johnson Intervenes In WASHINGTON' (UPI)-In his first intervention to halt a strike. President Johnson has created an emergency board to head off a walkout that would have crippled six major airlines in the midst of the Christmas travel rush. On Johnson's order, the board was set up Wednesday to inves tigate a dispute between the machinists' union and Braniff, Continental, Eastern. North Senate Pays WASHINGTON iL'Pl' The Senate paid its special tribute WednesdEy in six hours of mov ing eulogies to a slain colleague John F. Kennedy. The late President's younger brother. Sen. Edward M. Ken nedy, D-Mass., closed the long day of formal commemorative speeches by urging that the na tion unite behind President Johnson to solve problems through reason, "nut in vio lence." Democrats and Republicans, those who fought his programs and those who supported him in life joined in lavish praise loves . . lingerie NIGHT TIL 9 west, Trans World Airlines and National. The action will postpone a strike for at least 60 days while the board tries to solve the dis pute over pay raises and rule changes. The presidential order came with only minutes to spare. A National Mediation Board spokesman said a quickie walk out had been feared in 20 min utes at National Airlines, de- JFK Tribute for the late Chief Executive, slain by an assassin's bullet Nov. 22 in Dallas. It had special meaning to many senators who rose to speak of the boyish New Eng ender, who moved from the back row of the Senate where he served eight years to the front seat of the nation. OPEN TONITE TILL 9:00 J. W. KERNS 734 So. 6th TU 4-4197 pirtAwo n p t "r"" rYni J Tuck In a J UPOINTl'S V GIFT CERTIFICATE I X Air Strike 'spite a strike deadline of one minute after midnight Thurs day. 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