r PAGE- HERALD AND NEWS, Klamalh Falls, Oregon Tuesday, December 31, 1963 Weather Roundup Northern California: Mostly fair through Wednesday. Tile Dalles ar.d Hood River: Shcwcrs est part tenij,'lit, tome fog east; showery Wednesday; highs 41-50; low 34-40; gorge uind east -10-20. Beni: mostly cloudy tonight end Wednesday morning with some valley fog; high Wednes day 3-4j; lew iciwgtit 28-33. Baker and La Grande: Few showers this evening, snow c'mve 4.300 feet; mostly cloudy Wednesday with fog some val leys: highs 33-41; low tonight 31-33 except 25 high valleys. Portland Vancouver: Occa sional showers through Wednes day; highs 43-32; low tonight a bo.it 39. Western Oregon: Kew show ers through "Wednesday; highs 4K3; lew toniglil 22-11. Eastern Oregon: Scattered she'.vcrs or Ileal drizzle; high 'Wcd::esJay 23-i'J; low tonight 23-ISj. Tatoosh to Blanco: Gale warn ings up for outh to soutliwesi winds 32-42 decreasing to 13-22 tonight and Wednesday: f."'.v showers. Temperatures during the 24 hours ending at 4 a.m. FST to day. High Low I'cp Astoria 60 53 .17 Baker 33 24 Brookings 4't IMedford 35 North Bend irt 53 Pendleton 23 34 T Portland 43 41 .03 Redmond 51 33 Salem E2 51 T Portland 4fi 41 .03 Salem 52 51 T The Dalles 40 35 Chicago 13 II Los An.'clcs 75 tin New Voik 25 - Phoenix 114 34 San Francisco 37 47 Seattle 51 44 .21 Washington 211 . . Bulosrfen Corf Sentences Former Diplomat To Death VIENNA lUPli A Commu nist court in Sofia today sen tenced to death former Bulgar ian diplomat Ivan-Assen Gcorg lev for allegedly spying on be half of the United States, ac cording to the Bulgarian news agency BTA. BTA called the verdict "final and without right of appeal." It said the Bulgarian Supreme Court decreed Georgicv should die by firing squad. Previous Communist news agency reports from Sofia indi cated the former diplomat in offect had invited the death penalty for his crimes, which he was supposed to have com mitted to pay for mistresses on both sides of the Iron Curtain. Georgicv, 56, went on trial for treason on Thursday. BTA had reported previously that he made a full confession the first day and said that Monday state prosecutor Ivan Vachkov de manded the death penalty for him. Western observers had pre dicted he would get the death penalty. Radio Sofia, fn braodcasts monitored here, said Vachkov called Georgicv "a traitor to the homeland, a spy of the American intelligence." Even the former diplomat's defense counsel was quoted as say ing his guilt was "irrefutable." But the defense asked the court not to give Georgiev the "heaviest penalty." In Bulgaria execution usually is by firing squad. BTA said the handsome dip lomat, former No. 2 man in the Bulgarian delegation to the United Nations, testified he turned over military, economic and political information to agents of the U.S. Central In telligence agency during a sev en year period. Vachkov claimed Georgicv ad mitted the CIA spent more than $200,000 "on him and his para mours." Communist news agen cies have quoted him as saying the CIA supplied him with Pa risian and Bulgarian mistresses while he worked in New York. Johnson Enjoys Visit With Home Town Folks '. AUSTIN, Tex. (UPD-lt was Lyndon Johnson's day for a re union with the home town folks. Home town, in the sense that in these wide open Texas spaces Austin is as much the (Presi dent's home as his ranch IW miles away. "Austin Is the city that we love," the President said. "For iMrs. Johnson and me, our pub lic life began here. 1 have kept iLady Bird happy through the times past by promising that someday we would return to Austin to live and we sliall." Those were the Chief Execu tive's words Monday niglrt at a dinner dedicating the A'gtiikis IVihim Synagogue in the Texas capital, lie flew into town ear lier and: Attended the funeral of Nel lie Wilier, wktwv of Austin's Mayor Tom iMiller, once a po tent force in Tc.vas Democratic polities. -"Went with only the shortest imice to his long-time barber, fiim Elderson, in the American National Bank Building ami had his hair trimmed while four dozen townsfolk peered through Kic door. AWked through the d.iwn town area, sinking hands with hundreds cf amazed people Klimilh Fill, Orf Pirb1i.hu) ti'lv (ticnl Sat.) unif 3rvlm Stuthtrn Ortfcn ml Nirthtrn Calittrnl by K limit ft Puhlitftinf Ctmiiny W n (t( Fplntrit PHnt TUif 41111 enfartd at men-ciiM mitltr it th Dost otliee t Klmlh Flts, Ortoon. on Auuit II, ItM, vrHtr act ( Caif gr, Vorth 3. II" Sttonl-cU Mt paid at Klamath Pilli, Ortt and at additional mallini Mictti Carrltr I Mantti I Manmi 1 Vtar Mall in Advanct 1 Mantn ... Manrtts 1 Yaar Carrier and Dttlart Waakday. Cy . . lunacy, cw m UNITED PKKSS IHT NATIONAL AUDIT IUK1AU OF CIRCULATION iuhwribar nat ractlvlnf It vary at Tftttr HaraM and Nawt. pltiM phana rtixM 4-1111 nafra Ends TONITE! and 8)otted number of familiar faces in the process. 'Made use of his suilc in the Driskill Hotel, now the While House press headquarters, to h some telephoning lo Wash ington and sigiii some bills into law. Walked, then, to another suite two blocks uwny in the Commodore Perry Hold, where he iplaycd host to 30 or 40 per sons he knows from this cen tral Texas hills region. Motored to the synagogue, and said ilie wus grateful that his first non-official public re marks since lie became IPresi dent Nov. 22 could "be made here in Austin and in conjunc tion uilh the dedication of a house of worship." Foreign Aid Faces Knife Again In '64 WASHINGTON (CPU - If President Johnson thinks he had headaches with the foreign aid bill this year, just wait un til l4. Rep. Otto E. Passman, D-La., already is looking forward to culling next year's program by at least half a billion dollars below the $3 billion that Con gress finally voted for the cur rent fiscal year. This is right in line with Passman's stcp-by-stcp strategy to chop the foreign aid pro gram down to procr size, which in his view is about $2 billion. The $') billion aid hill ap proved by the Senate Monday before Congress adjourned its longest session in 22 years was a far cry from the $4.5 hillinn that President Kennedy asked. Informed sources said that Passman, chairman of the House foreign aid appropria tions subcommittee, would be shooting for a $2.5 billion pro gram in the new session, with the lio)c he could reach the $2 billion mark in I!Mi!i. President Johnson knows the fight is brewing. He ordered a lop-level review of the objec tives and organization of the U.S. foreign aid program. The five-man While House group has been instructed lo report to him by Jan. 15. The group's recommendations will serve as the basis for the President's foreign aid mes sage to Congress, expected late in January or early in Febru ary. Passman regards the appoint ment of such groups as part and narccl of Iho annual bat tle. Every President since the program started 15 years ago has ordered a similar "hard look" at foreign aid, Passman has labeled such studies as "whitewash." little people's puzzle Fires Claim 23 Lives Across Nation f w i I I I I nri jUACRossj 10 I I I I f jR05&l 1 1 1 ' 1 1 I i-iu:h-i.mmC ixvi 6 onix ? vaNvd 'snvoaAo i 'ssvdwoa 't uoQ ONIlNlVd '01 'HSIJMV1S '8 '3SnN L 'V3S '9 XDOiaVd '3U31Vd C lOISVHO ssojjy :SM3MSNV NAACP Seeks To Ban Blackfaces In Parade Don't Expect New License SALEM lUPIt - Don't rush down lo the motor vehicles of fice Thursday morning in hopes of gelling one of the new three letter, three - number license plates, the molor vehicles office cautioned today. While the new style aula li cense plates will go into use Jan. 2, car owners will not re ceive them when Ihey renew their licenses. The new style plates will be issued to persons who buy new cars, or move into the slate, and as replacements for lost or damaged plates. The transition lo the new style is expected to lake several years. The department's announce nient was lo discourage those who might have hoped to get a low combinalinn of tellers and numbers. Prairie dogs drink when show ers leave puikllcs but between limes do without water, like oilier dwellers of arid places. PHILADELPHIA UP1 - A court hearing was scheduled to day on a suit by the National Association for the Advance ment of Colored People i NAACP) seeking to bar black face clowns or minstrels from a parade on New Year's Day. Two other civil rights groups, the Congress of Itacial Equality (COKE) and the Committee For Freedom Now, threatened to form a human chain to block the 641 h annual Mummers pa rade Wednesday if any of lite marchers use blackface make up. Charles W. Bowser, attorney for the local NAACP, filed a request Monday for a prelim inary injunction against the use of blackface and Common Pleas Court Judge Theodore llcimel set the hearing. Bowser noted that city offi cials have tried lo discourage the use of blackface but said the NAACP wants "this matter determined in the courts and not in the streets." Louis Smith, chairman of the local, chapter of CUUE, said that the blackfaced marchers were a "gross insult" to Ne groes. Smith and Stanley Blanche, head of (lie Committee For Freedom Now, said in a joint statement that "since the city of Philadelphia has given the blackface mimics the green light, we have no choice but to use our bodies to s4op this pa rade." The dispute started when Magistrate Elias Myers, the parade director, and city lice reation Commissioner Hobert Crawford announced that black face marchers would be banned from the parade. After protests and demonstra tions in Iron! of his home by members of some Mummers' groups. Myers said the makeup would be allowed as lung as the marchers "behave themselves and don't poke fun at any body." Crawford later announced that blackfaced m a r c li e r s would not be eligible for the cash prizes awarded lo partici pants in the parade, which in cludes clown clubs and string bands. During the weekend, about 50 Negroes staged a sit-in in the lobby of a television station iWCAU - TV i which plans to telecast the parade locally. Smoke Affects Miss America MIAMI lUPH-Donna Axum, the current Miss America, was confined to bed today liv doc tors who said she was suffering belated effects from the lioos evclt Hold lire in Jacksonville Sunday. Dr. liobert l-'arrington, w h o examined Miss Axum this morning, said she was sutfering burns of the nose and throat and chemical Irachco-broni'liilis from inhaling smoke during Ilie blaze that killed 22 poisons. "The condition is not serums in itself," said Harrington, a lo cal physician. ENDS TONITE Last Shaw Starts at 9;1S ..you trust this man with your store? Ininv Irene v m STORE? Tama inukukiii TONITE ONLY! !D0NT GO TO 8E0 UNTIL YOU SEE THE SPECIAL NEW YEAR'S EVE PREVIEW SHOWING OF Who's Been Sleeping In My Bed?' DOORS OMN S:30, SHOW AT 4:09 . ALL SEATS TONITE 1.25 , s i.ri IIS.1C SUN s in SIS.M IK JOCK LEMMON 8HmLEMcLOINB i "HMD Vjc VT I MaAisia I -THE VALIANT" . II DEAN MARTIN puts it on the line: P.I I V ! Who's Been sieepindtn wit v . ,. and you can choose between TT""V oackrose ! I i f i.i, Production J I mmr By United Press International At least 23 Americans, 18 of titem children, died in fires which swept their homes today and Monday. A number of the (ires were blamed on over heated furnaces and heaters heavily taxed by the wintry cold. Seven of the victims, all chil dren, died today at Youngstown, Ohio, and Nashua, N.H. Six teen persons perished Monday. Four children of Mr. and Mrs. Josh Hall, ranging in age from 7 to 12, died when flames swept their two-story frame home at Youngstown. The parents and other children escaped from the blaze, which was believed to have started in an overheated furnace. At Nashua, a tenement house fire claimed the lives of three children -of Mr. and Mrs. Eu gene Ricard. The children, aged 3 to 5, were sleeping in an at tic when the pre dawn fire was touched off by a stove explosion in the apartment of another couple. l our members of a Wisconsin family died Monday in one blaze while three children of a young sailor perished in an other. Clarence E. Hansen. 27, his wife, Frances. 28, and two of Iheir four children were asphyx iated when fire swept their spa cious home at Pleasant Prairie. Wis. The children were Clarence, 2, and Kenneth, 2 months. Fire men said Mrs Hansen helped save two daughters and a baby sitter before succumbing to smoke inhalation rerself. The fire was apparently start ed by overheated Christmas tree lights, authorities said. The three children of a sailor burned to death when their house trailer at San Diego, Calif., burst into flames while lhey slept. Their mother, Mrs. Cloidettea Pike. 22, was awak ened by the children's cries. She suffered seriuus burns try ing to save litem before rush in? from the trailer, her hair ablaze, crying for help. The bodies of the children, liobert Eugene. 5. Marvin Lloyd, 3. and Valeria Sue. 3 months, were lound in their charred bunks. t Three children died at Dan ville, III., when fire swept their home and a neighbor with a back ailment was unable to drag them from their (laming rooms. Dead were Clifford. 4. Der rick. 2, and Michelle, 1. chil dren of Mr. and Mrs. James Kelly. A neighbor, Harvey Me- carry (hem from their house be Cray, tried to revive two of the I cause of a permanent back in youngsters but was unable to I jury. Tlie children's mother was not at home at the time of tht fire. it UNIVERSAL: cut STUDIOS - ,,M.,.,.IMi Expecf ffie inexpecfed...wien they become partners in canger...and delight! Cary Grant is the Adventurer... Audrey Hepburn ...is his Adventure! IS ...,iitJ,rf.i ?r - Alii Charade A STANLEY DONEN Production 1, costarrinj .Walter MatthauJames Coburn Music-HENRY mancini I Screenplay by PETER STONE Produced and Directed by STANLEY DONEN ' TECHNCOtOR Starts WEDNESDAY J A Universal Release Continuous From 12:45, Reg. Trices s:::i:::::::::::::::::::Si;:is:U:U:::::: Free Hats, Horns, Noisemakers and Favors! STARTS MIDNITE TONITE BIG SPECIAL SHOW FOR NEK YEAR'SH OOORS OPEN 11:45 ONE PERFORMANCE ONLYI ALL SEATS 1.25 run nmnrti i mi ... . I fit MlrilbLin WWmi IdULBRynnER, George CHAKiRis Shirieu Anns fieib NOW A LOST WORLD BECOMES A NEW WORLD OF ADVENTURE! E , TMIr I rrimldi toieM Un iky . . . Tliif r iJt twmi igietM mi iilghtirbey ttre JJfr ttiiintm tlitnrM...Hultri(f oinuun...ninjit ni mi euzaTeth MONTGOMERY martin BALSAWI jill ST. JOHN nd CAROL RICHARD 10UIS JACK MACHA Y3K.0 OiANSf ELLIOTT CONTENYE-SOO-MERIL-UiaWSTER-REID BURNETT d.u,c.;L . l tmnttyOAyi MANN-WrJAK KQft - RftSIKrV RELEASE , f-f. ,l PANAVISION tM'IM-Ml ! RICHARD m 1 BASEHART brao dexter J.liEIWMSIiN Eiyon ARNOLD UJAUE5 R WEBB ElUOIT ARNOLD LfWBJ.MCHUl turiMFrl 1 i'J'e