Wednesday, Apr. 18, 1962 Longview Daily News Page 2 Show Business I Answer to Previous Puzzle School Directors Will Hear Bruno JFK Cancels Court Martial Weather Man Again Makes Rain Forecast ACBOSS Longtime 1 Veteran populiriong popular linger ium 5 Kind of concert AwDial Kind of drum t6rnapea 7 Danger 12 Scent Baseball players 9 Tropical plant 10 Baseball's Mustal 11 Lays turf 'S In 'Spirit Of Easter Wee 13 Prayer 14 Quartet member 15 Individual performance 16 Conflict 17 Amphibian 18 Strikes with open hand 20 Hean show 22 High note of Sounding somewhat like a cracked record, the weather forecast for tonight and Thursday is for increasing cloudiness with occasional rain. 19 Stage error 21 TV receiver 23 Eager 25 History 32Musical 47 Featured directions 49 Hoarfrost 35 Famous English 50 Spoken school si cotton pod zs state Landed 27 Mentally oond38What scouts That was the forecast issued Tuesday for the next 24 hours, look for (pL) 28 Enthusiasm Louis Bruno, state superintendent of public instruction, will discuss new developments in education before an audience of school board members from this area at a meeting to be held next Wednesday in Longview. The meeting, one of a series of 14 regional workshops being held throughout the state by the Washington State School Directors Association, will begin at 6:30 p.m. in the Mark Morris Junior-Senior High School As keynote speaker, Bruno's topic will be, "The Future Begins Besides school board members, superintendents of local districts, county superintendents, clerks.
and before that a somewhat sim 54 Lateral part 55 Plant 58 Essential being 58 Era 2S "it performance 40 Upon 43 Pilch 45 Slanted type ilar prediction had been issued by 23 inactive 31 Painful '-v s' ill 1 r-' i 29 Lock of hair the Weather Bureau on Monday. So far the forecast has failed to ations for new buildings, and controversy and common sense. Since the school directors' association will shortly begin preparation of a suggested school budget to be presented to the state legislature, a section of the meeting will be devoted to a discussion of what this budget means to each local district General chairman of the Long-view meeting will be Mrs. Eileen B. Kalles, Puyallup, past presid-etn of the state association.
Discussion group chairmen and co-chairmen will include Harry A. Calbom Longview; Marvin Johnston, Weyerhauser public relations man; J. Harold Clarke, Dwaco; Earl J. Reed, superintendent of Longview Public Schools; Mrs. Pauline Murphy, Kelso; Ly-dia Crosby, Cowlitz County superintendent of schools; Robert C.
Bates, superintendent of Vancouver Public Schools; A. L. Beck, state office of public instruction. hold up, to tlie delight of most of the populace. Sunny weather has prevailed through the period when clouds WASHINGTON (AP) President Kennedy announced today that "in the spirit of Easter week" he has canceled t-martial proceedings against a National Guardsman who complained against the President's call-up of Reservists.
At a news conference carried to the nation over live TV and radio, Kennedy said that gripes by a small number of Reservists were more misguided than anything else. So he said he got in touch with the secretary of the Army and arranged for dropping of the charges against Pfc. Larry D. Chidester. 24.
of Salt Lake City, who is stationed at Ft Lewis, Wash. Kennedy also announced he was freeing Pfc. Bernis Owen. 23, of and showers were expected. In fact, the weather not only has been sunny, but it has been warm.
and members of county boards of education are expected to attend. Followuig the keynote address. i ii a li is I I inpior is ft 1 17 1 i 55 Ti a a 3 3T 37 a 3 to fl s7 "3 3" si 62 sr 64 3 The mercury climbed to a pleasant 73 degrees in Longview and Kelso Tuesday afternoon. Seattle also recorded 73 degrees, making it the warmest day of the year in 33 Actress Gardner 34 Heap 38 Stage light 37 Dispatched 39 Facts 41 Mr. Gershwin 42 Handle 44 Show reviews 46 Vegas, Nevada 48 Negative word 49 Young actress Shore S3 Out of date 57 Press 68Wmglikepart 60 Falsehoods 61 Beer ingredient 62 Prearrange a quiz show 63 Roman data 64 Building additions 65 Saiirte (ab.) 66 Grant DOWN 1 Order around 2 Sacred image participants will attend discussion groups covering legal questions, how to get a united community behind the schools, what a superintendent expects from a Olympia, and John T.
Hulls, school board, educational specific- Woodland. the Puget Sound city. The five-day forecast issued this morning calls for temperatures averaging above normal, with a slight cooling trend toward Refusal To Observe Federal the end of the period. There will be some precipitation, with total amounts near the seasonal Allotments Brings Farm Loss LAKE VILLAGE. Ark.
(API- HEWSPAPEK ENTERPRISE ASSN. crop. Many farmers in this rich Mis Maximum temperatures during the balance of the week are expected to range from 65 to 75 degrees in Western Washington, with lows in the 36-44 degree Refusal to observe federal acreage crop allotments has cost James Weir his 944-acre farm. Seadrift, a Reservist on duty at Ft. Polk, La.
Owen was found guilty on March 27 of a charge similar to that against Chidester. Owen was sentenced to six months hard labor and ordered to forfeit $50 a month pay while in the stockade. Chidester was accused of violating the uniform code of military justice by encouraging fellow soldiers to sign a letter critical of the President. LETTER HIT JFK Sent to Sen. Wallace F.
Ben sissippi Kiver valley area are sympathetic with Weir's cause. One farmer testified at a hear About 125 farmers from the area bracket. attended a government auction at will serve a very useful purpose," said Secretary of Commerce Luther H. Hodges. "Large numbers of business men will visit the fair during the next six months.
At the center they will which the farm was sold Tuesday ing before the Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Committee: "He's doing what a lot of us would like to and to." Commerce Plans Business Center At Fairgrounds WASHINGTON (AP) The Commerce Department said Tuesday it will open a business service to L. Warren of Lake Providence, for $60,000. Weir has said the farm was worth $300,000. Conservatives Suffer Setback The sale culminated a long run Garden Club get a much better understanding I of the various ways in which the Commerce Department can help them to improve and expand their business operations, both in this country and abroad." ning battle between Weir and the government, which contends he owes $16,972 for overplanting his center Saturday at the Seattle worlds Fair. LONDON (AP) Another sharp "We believe this new facility election setback for Prime Minis KEY TO A WORLD'S FAIR Democratic Sens.
Henry Jackson, left, and Warren Magnuson, both from Washington state, call on President Kennedy today at the White House to hand over a gold telegraph key to be used Saturday when the chief executive opens the Seattle World's Fair. Six previous Presidents have used the key to open other expositions, the Holland Tunnel and the Panama Canal. The key is solid gold with platinum contact points and is mounted on a slab of Alaskan marble encircled with gold nuggets. AP Wirephoto. ter Harold Macmillan's ruling Conservative party brought warnings today that the party's pros pects of being returned to office at the next general election are seriously threatened.
1 A special parliamentary election in North Derby Tuesday gave victory as expected to a Labor can it didate. But the resurgent Liberals, Freedom Dash Driver Slain riding a wave of government unpopularity, pushed the Consent tive candidate into third place. It was the government's fifth setback in special elections in the Inducts Combs LOUISVILLE, Ky (AP)- Gov. Bert Combs, a veteran of World War II and many a political battle, stood with determined jaw and flinty eye Tuesday night and became the first male honorary member of the Garden Club of Kentucky, Inc. Combs told the banquet audience, sprinkled lightly with a few males, "I am most grateful for this honor I don't know how it's gonna work out," apparently referring to his own gardening prowess.
The governor won the hearts of garden club members by what a spokesman called complete cooperation in causes in which the organization was interested. President Mrs. J. Richard Gott Jr. of Louisville said.
"We decided he should be a member." Combs, a Democrat grinned. The ladies grinned, too, and gave him a hearty hand when he stood up to accept his plaque. nett, R-Utah, the letter asked whether Kennedy "liked expenditures of great proportions which he allocates freely or does he think the Jobs left open by our callup will re-elect him on the basis of low unemployment." Kennedy's mood throughout the news conference appeared to be genial and buoyant in contrast to his obvious anger a week ago over the steel price rise which he hammered down. On other matters: DISARMAMENT The President opened the conference by saying the United States has submitted at Geneva a blueprint for a general disarmament treaty. He called it the most comprehensive series of proposals this country or any other has ever made.
He said he hopes that in the give and take of the conference table, the plan will have a constructive effect He said the nations conferring at Geneva have a responsibility to try for a breakthrough in disarmament negotiations. NUCLEAR Kennedy once again said he will go ahead with the nuclear testing unless some agreement for a test ban is reached. And chances for such an agreement, he said, appear to be very negative. A reporter asked what about reports that some military advisers are advocating helping France de Sil OWN fcT5 1959 nee acreage allotment. Weir contends that crop acreage allotments are unconstitutional and battled the Department of Agriculture for three years over the issue.
U.S. Dist Judge J. Smith Henley upheld the constitutionality of acreage allotments and placed a judgment of more than $22,000 against Weir Feb. 12. Weir wouldn't give up.
He sought an injunction to halt the sale until he could appeal. He was told he could stop the sale by posting a $23,000 bond to cover the amount of the judgment, Interest and court costs, but refused. He still owes a $10,244 penalty for overplanting his 1960 rice crop. He has paid a penalty of $8,900 for overplanting his 1958 CALENDAR Public Events TONIGHT Kelso School Board, 8 p.m., city hall. last six weeks.
Most of the Con BERLIN (AP) Three East Germans crashed a gravel-filled to protect the public interest there as he did during and after the steel settlement? Kennedy said be will try to see that the public interest will be protected, but there are definite limitations on what the government can do. He said he hopes that all parties will try to act in the public interest, too. GOLD Should wives of servicemen over seas be allowed to join their husbands? Kennedy was asked. The questioner said Gov. Nelson A.
Rockefeller of New York had said he thought they should be allowed to do so. The President said he thought he had answered that question last week, but he repeated what he said then, that the gold crisis trucK through a Communist bar remains great and that at the moment it's against this country's interest to add to the burden. CAMPAIGN COSTS Kennedy thanked the President's Commission on Campaign Costs and said its report, delivered to him today, will be the basis of recommendations he expects to make to Congress. Among other things, the commission advocated allowing citizens to deduct from income taxes contributions to campaigns. EXCOMMUNICATIONS The President declined to comment on the excommunication of three segregationists by the Catholic archbishop of New Orleans.
The matter did not concern "public acts or public interests" he said, and comment from him would be inappropriate. rier into West Berlin today, but Red machine-gun fire killed the servative defectors have voted Liberal. Today two Conservative papers the Daily Mail and Daily Telegraphwarned that the Liberals are a serious threat that could split the Conservative vote in the general election, expected in the fall of 1963, and put the Labor driver and wounded a companion, East German border police fired repeatedly as the 24-year-old dnv er roared through the wooden barrier at a midtown crossing party in power. point the Berlin wall at 1 a.m The heavy truck smashed into Ninety per cent of the Canadian I population is concentrated alone a house on the West Berlin side. One passenger, 20, was shot in the shoulder.
The other, 29, escaped uie u.a. Dorder. STILL THINKS HE'S RIGHT with bruises. Let Your Hat Speak For Itself "THIS IS THE NICEST Private Bureau Reservist Let Off Hook By Kennedy 'Very Happy' To Grade, Scale State's Timber EASTER EVER' at ABERDEEN (AP) The state were somewhat critical, but many have criticized the President much more than I have done. "I do think that President Ken- has turned over the scaling and popularly priced neay is doing a good lob.
I was velop an atomic weapons capability? The President said the policy of the United States continues to be against proliferation of nuclear weapons. This will continue to be the policy unless the administration feels the security -situation has changed, he added. A reporter said there were reports that Russia had expressed willingness to enter a nuclear test-ban agreement if the United States would close just one base in Europe. Kennedy said he had never heard such a proposal and had no reason to believe the Soviets were ready to do such a thing. In response to another question.
just asking him a few questions about a few things that were in my mind." 1 1395 595 695 1295 Chidester, an automotive mechanic with the 115th Ordnance a Utah outfit was accused of soliciting and encouraging the men in his outfit to sign the letter critical of the President. The letter was sent to Sen. Wallace F. Bennett, R-Utah, about FT. LEWIS, Wash.
(AP)-Pfc. Larry D. Chidester said Wednesday "I am very happy" that President Kennedy canceled court martial proceedings against him, but still contended he had the right to write his senator a letter. The President, "in the spirit of Easter week," arranged for the dropping of charges against the 24-year-old Salt Lake City soldier who faced a court martial next Monday. Chidester was accused of violating the uniform code of military justice by encouraging fellow soldiers to sign a letter critical of the President.
"I'm very happy about this," said Chidester in a telephone interview. He repeated the phrase over and over. "I'm very happy and it's something I deeply respect the President for, now more than ever. "Regrets? I actually don't have regrets. I believe I have the right to write a letter to my senator.
Perhaps there were things that the President said no specific date for a resumption of U.S. testing March 20. The President, at his news con ference, said that gripes by i Has been set. BERLIN Replying to a question about Berlin, the President said a basic issue is the status of grading of timber on state-owned land in the Grays Harbor area to the Grays Harbor Log Scaling and Grading Bureau. Bert Cole, director of the Department of Natural Resources, announced the state has also become a member of the bureau, most of whose members are logging firms.
"We have recognized the Grays Harbor bureau and become a member to prove to the public that a private agency can do the job without loss of revenue to the state," Cole said at the bureau's annual stockholders meeting Monday night The arrangement is on a one-year trial basis. Bureaus in the Puget Sound and Columbia River areas have been turned down on their requests for similar action, pending evaluation of the Grays Harbor program. The bureau's scalers took over in April and will handle all timber cut from state-owned land in western Jefferson County and Grays Harbor County. Werner Mayr, president of the bureau, estimated 35 per cent of the timber in the area is state-owned or controlled. small number of reservists were more misguided than anything the East German regime.
He said else. the problem of access to the city and how the Western Allies can Although Chidester was accused of encouraging his fellow soldiers to sign the letter, he said "there was a question as to whether I asked them to sign it or whether maintain their status there is being discussed. But he said he could not, without precise lan guage before him, talk about a they asked me to let them sign it because they thought the letter mself in these Sadler it(w hr: HANDBAGS IZ.77 VL- 'X Do 0 EASTER COATS 0 EASTER DRESSES 0 EASTER SUITS possibility for the Communist German authorities to have some say in a control authority over the would do some good. "I was accused of that, but it was not proven," he said. "I'm approaches to Berlin.
The ques tioner had suggested such a pos sibility. very glad the President has said that." Kennedy said that although the Berlin situation now is quiet, it Chidester's attorney, Lt James R. co*ker, said "I'm very pleased with the results." VOU CAJi TASTE THE DIFFERENCE i. is, a dangerous one which could erupt. LABOR The President was told that the next round of union negotiations will involve workers who make missiles.
Would he try Amateur Show Tryouts Billed Final tryouts for the Kiwanis Club amateur show will be held in Korten's auditorium Saturday from 3-5 p.m. Those performers winning auditions will appear in the 27th annual show in the R. A. Long High School auditorium May 5. The entire proceeds of this year's show will be used to construct a cabin at the Salmon Creek Camp Fire Girls camp.
Manpower for cabin construction will also be furnished by the Ki-wanians. Proceeds from the show are traditionally used for youth activities. ALL PURE FOODS. NO Preservatives IN OUR BAKING DAYLITE BAKERY Earn 15 IJ'M THE LONGVIEW DAILY NEWS Twelfth and Broadway lxHigview, Wash. issued everv afternoon except Sunday by the Longview Publishing Co Second class postage is Pld at Loneview, Wash.
Subscription rates by Junior Dealer and Motor Kotite one month in advance. $1.50. Mail rates for Cow-Mtr. Lewis, Wahkianum, Clark and Pacific Counties. Wash, and Columbia County, Ore, In advance one month.
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This small aid has no dangling cords or separate transmitting units and represents a most unusual idea and design in a product for the hard of hearing. It is especially made for those people who can hear, but can't understand. This new hearing instrument provides "ear-level" hearing with the wearer picking up speech, sounds, television, and radio at his ear rather than at a transmitter located in the wearer's clothing. Due to the use of 4 transistors, the user cost is extremely low and the instrument weighs approximately Vi-ounce. It is about the size of a sewing thimble.
Write or see Pacific Hearing Aid Service, 316 N.E. 19th, Portland, Oregon, corner Sandy Blvd. or phone BE 4-3717. You will receive lull information without any obligation whatever. Single Layer Rich and 89' 34c Moist ASK ABOUT OUR LUCKY 13 CLUB We're Moving! HAVE YOU TRIED GEORGE'S CHUCKWAGON? LUNCH, 11 to 2, $1.00 DINNER, 5 to 9, $1.50 ASK YOUR NEIGHBOR! GEORGE'S BROILER Across from theater HA 3-0720 EASTER CAKES AND GOODIES To Be Sure Order la Advance THREE LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU 1020 15th HA 5-5730 3rd 4 Oak EX 5-5010 Triangle HA 54670 Look for us after May 1st at 1313 Commerce, across the street from our present location.
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