PAGE FOUR HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. ORECION MONDAY. MAnCH 10, 10fl2 FRANK JENKINS Alitor Entered u aecond elasa matter at the post office of Klamath Palls, Ore, on Auguit 30, 1906, under act of Congress, March I, Hit MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use tor publication of til the local newt printed in this newspaper as veil as all AP news. SUBSCRIPTION RATES Bf Mai- . t o.n.hs9.N' By Mi-II year 11.00 NEW YORK Wl What king has one of the world's finest collections of covers from raior blade pack ages? Why, King Farouk of Egypt. This its-crowned, rotund nabob of the Nile has won considerable notoriety as one of the last of the loyal playboys. His romances, practical Jokes, and roulette losses have made him one of the best known of modern monarchs. But little attention has been paid to the serious side of his nature, as retlected by his urge to collect things. Few know, (or example, that Farouk has assembled probab ly the largest private coin collec tion in existence, valued at several million dolars. It has never been publicly ex hibited as yet. One of the few who have seen it Is Hans M. F. Schul man, n international dealer in rare coins who often does business with the Egyptian throne. A kins may be no hero to his valet, but Farouk Is one in the eyes of his com dealer. "Anybody who collects coins bas ically has a serious nature." said Schulman. "But Kintt Farouk also is an ardent stamp and match book collector. He also collects arms and armour, books on Egypt and Mohammedanism, and the covers of razor blade packages." The variety of his interests might lead some to suspect he was not so much a collector as an accumu latorsuch as the late Collver brothers, who filled a Manhattan brownstone with refuse rangimt from new tin cans to old grand pianos. But Schulman. who has visited the king in his palace, says Farouk, Li a shrewd and active expert in his hobbles. "After finishing his affairs of state he sometimes retires alone to Ms room and works over his coins JACOBY on Canasta "We run into a certain amount of confusion." writes a San Fran cisco correspondent, "in replacing the-red threes. We play both Ca nasta and Samba, and wonder it the, rule is . the same . Ior both games. r "Suppose you are dealt a red three as part of your original hand. Are you allowed to replace It from the stock pile and then pick up the discard pile?" Yes, you are permitted to do so in either Canasta or Samba. This right applies only to your very first play ot a hand. Later on you are 'not allowed to take the dis card pile. Let me go into this matter in some detail, because a large num ber of fans have written me to about it. The important thing to remember is that drawing to re place a red three at your very first turn is not considered a regu lar play; it is just a preliminary. When the game lirst came to us from South America, it was cus tomary lor everybody to put down his red threes before anybody made a play. Anybody who had put down a red three then drew a card to replace It, and the play began only after ail this had taken place. Our American rule provides that you draw a card for your red three at your first turn to play instead of before the play begins. How ever, that draw is stilt considered a preliminary, just as it was in the original South American game. That preliminary has no effect on your later play. You are still in position to choose whether you will draw from the stock pile or take the discard pile. (On most hands, of course, you will not have the right cards to take the discard pile, and therefore you will have so choice.) This rule applies only to your very first play because that Is the only time that you hold red threes that were dealt to you by the deal er. If you draw a red three, later on, from the stock pile you have already begun your play by draw ing from the stock pile. Hence you may replace the red three by drawing again from the stock pile, but you are not allowed to change horses in midstream by drawing the discard pile instead. This follows the general princi ple that you must carry through on a play that you have begun. If you start to take the discard pile, you are committed to do so (if you can). You can't pick a few cards up, fiddle about with them, and then put them back and decide to draw from the stock pile instead. "Will you please save my fam ily from divorce or murder by solv ing my Samba problem," requests Milwaukee reader. "My husband and I, together With another couple, have been playing: Samba for about two months. I always sit to my hus band's left, and my girl friend sits to his right. My husband is the culprit and fiend In this plot. "I maintain that when four peo ple play cards the game should in clude all four people, but my hus band makes it a game of solitaire by hoarding all his cards, refusing even to meld or add to his part ner's melds until he has every thing cornered and two thirds ot the cards are in the discard pile. "Then my girl friend, with ab solutely no clue as to what he is holding. Is consistently forced to give him that huge discard pile. He's always winning, and always doing it In two hands, but where is the card game for the rest of us? SINUS INFECTIONS ' DR. E. M. MARSHA mnfiltr YrMttS ' a) SmIi(t sftiaif m N.. Ilk rkue 7 Ml llrraetl' PbyileliB BILL JENKINS Managing Editor .., -i and stamps until six o'clock in the morning," Schulman added. Like any enthusiastic amateur, Farouk likes to do his collecting personally. An Amsterdam lady sent him some Dutch match book covers nnd hopefully asked if he had any Cairo match book covers in excnange. Instead ol handinc the matter over to a secretary, the king rounded them up and mailed them to her himseli. "If you give him a coin as a present to add to his collection a coin worth maybe a dollar or less he is happier than a schoolboy," Schulman said. But Farouk knows values, and likes a bargain. 'His couecuon ot u.a. coins is fantastic," Schulman remarked. 'the onlv coin he lacks is a very rare so gold piece minted in l&U. One sold several years ago in Balt imore ior 514.600 the hmhesi price ever paid for a coin anywhere. 'Farouk knew about it but oian t bid on it." Schulman was understandably ill at ease when he first called ai the palace. The king noticed this at once and said: "Don't be nervous you're just meeting another customer." According to the coin dealer, Fa rouk emovs.DOker. is a witty con versationalist, and keeps up to the minute on American politics and American slang. "If vou ever talk about me on television program," he said, "be sure and don't follow Dagmar you won't be able to hold the audi ence." Later, after dinner at a Cairo club, the king gave Schulman a silver cigaret case as a souvenir. He also had a present for Mrs. Schulman a cigar. "He has a real sense of humor," explained Schulman. "While he plays a lone game his own partner gets nothing out of it, and we girls must ease our frus tration by eating double portions ot sandwiches and cake after the game. "I can't get back at my hus band by eating green onions and Umburger cheese sandwiches the rest of my life, so I devised a way to foil him, and here is whai happened. I instructed my girl friend to play the same as my husband, and I did the same. The other man saw what was going on, so in self-defense he had to do it too. . "As a result, for six straight hands we went through the stock pile, both sides on the table wltb two jokers and only enough aces to make the proper meld, but that is all. Once one side had a com pleted canasta, but in all six hands neither side had the required two canastas. "For s'x hands that luscious rich discard pile just lay there with no body getting It. This was certainly better than one man getting it all the time, but it just wasn't a good game. The whole thing was stym ied. . "So please, Mr. Jacoby, H a hu man heart beats within your manly chest, clear up this problem that has crept up on us. I might add that the four of us have called a truce and have gone back to bridge until we see something in the pa per about our problem." This is a difficult problem, and I don't see the solution to it off hand. I've played quite a bit of Samba, and so have most of my friends, but nobody has seen or beard of this kind of experience. It each player discards black threes and wild cards at each turn, you can get about halfway through the stock pile, but then somebody will run out of safe cards. It strikes me that the pack should be picked up at least three or four times out of six deals, and not always by the same player. The only explanation I can see is that my correspondent's husband Is so much better than the other players that it isn't much fun for them to take a beating each time. If the two girls played to meld out quickly, without trying to de fend the discard pile, they should be able to meld out in most deals within five or six turns to play. That would catch friend husband with a mlttful of cards and no melds. Twins Born To KF Officer , Two Juvenile-sized problems were: added to the household of Francis' Mathews, Klamath County Juvenile officer, over the weekend. Mrs. Mathews, Sunday at Klam ath Valley Hospital, presented her husband with twin girls. Mother and babies were report-! ed "doing fine" and Mathews as recovering rapidly. The first child, weighing s' pounds 11 ounces, was named Wen-! dy Brandon, and the second girl! wcigning o pounos a ounces, was named Clry Shannon. The Mathews also have two boys,' aged live and three years. j i TVft VI IntSI Mnh OKA ..n.. long, will be in 'operation for the nrsi nme in Scotland this year at ! a i-ennsnire ski ClUD. Wonderful Relief for I7CI1II1GSKIM! To promptly aootie Intense itching of nab enema, psoriasis, athlete's foot, pimples, and similar surface alda and scalo irritations, arjolv Zemo a modern blgbly medicated stainless anti eeptle. Zemo also helm heal and clear tba irritated skin. Buy Extra SlwtQlk Zemo Liquid lor stuBDora IZEM0 eases, any arupunre. They'll Do It Every ICH THE Orly FVR FLOTILLA MOTH-EATEM CCWT, W4S ALWAYS MUCrMJCM TCO J p J WARM IrJ HERE, Jtfi-r" (wteYXK Y f fBJMONW? KILW Lrft Iron i-.t tix.; rrwirMv.ii. i.. imnTr.rvii. I . -.-: --i AV r" s-io I v-v . I vftlt(b, V. i m v . On th Democratic aide are Hen. ' ' v . -; 1 1 'Ji' 'lL''- v jKefutivcr l Tcmieasro mid i'resl- v.vl v mra! it !t i i K l" V fV?J 'At Kcllev Hint Truman will Miiulher" StVV AVW it!' 71 Jr.-J ! lf. Tiling were popping on other rw 'v - ... - - . . fbk.4 Itltphotot RAINED IN The San Francisco Seals introduce the horschidc to the Cow Palace's vast arena as the rain chased them off their own field. The tanbark proved admirable undcrlooling for a two-hour drill which included pepper games (shown here), throwing and running. It was the first time base ball had been played in the huge building, the scene of many sporting events. jail (KF.A TeUphoto) MILK LINE FOR KOREA'S HUNGRY As Ihey do every day at Kumchang, Korea, in every kind of j weather, Korea's hungry line up for their handout of milk and rice. The line is composed of the i young, the old, and the sick. Only children under 15 and adults over 60 can draw rations unles ! they are ill. The powdered milk is received from fie United Nations Civil Assistance Organization and is distributed by the 1st KOK Division's civil assistance section. iA....,...,..,A......,. ...,.. to .A..,.,.,.,..,.. j.g.,.... BARBERS KLAMATH FALLS I read the I um" P'''i statement in your column tcuivjiia smuviuu icgmuuiK th? five-dnv week for barberx ln!i"-"uu " umiier win. again oc: Klamath Falls and I'd certainly like to know your source of in-! formation because all the mis- statements and biased opinions! . , . ... you expressed surely takes the;nave siBned ln Iavl"' aealnst six prize. ' ; vS,. without an inkline of the true facts .ui avuii.iiiv.iiti nvic hiihwj which ! am about to give you and! expect to see written in their en tirety either In your column or Telling the Editor column. Such untrue facts as you wrote Is what stirs up animosity against the bar bers and other tradesmen by the general public. First of all a petition is being circulated by the Local Union to determine the amount of member-i ship in favor and not in favor of the five-day week, show owners! co-owners ana journeyman naving: a signature, only apprentices be-i ing excluded. If the majority is in favor then It will be brought up. for a vote the same as any other : member so your statement that shop owners had no vote in the Time StfliSifE CWNEP WAS A EVERY HOUSE W4f?M FOf HER" HAS A NEW BLUE MINKPOW,P4H, HOtV VSPWCrllliy IT ALWAYS SEEMS MOOORS r- "vi Ah 'ik.c-v .ai. i matter was entirely wrong. The plan if instituted will be on a trial i basis of 90 days at the end of this! . , , : voted on to see whether to continue or discontinue the five-day week, c far 1n ,h , r .1. "''"',"","" snop or co-owners not m lavor. so i.u" " .u,:. '. .1. - wim LI1R lOlirilPVIIlPIl nniniHIZ 1PCR' hT ,m h. "L V'i how could we be pushing the mat - tor rinwn I,a k.' ll.nnl.. your article Intimated. K?.ymond D. Cottresi, Secretary. uarucrs Lnion Local sil ODD? WOJITHINO. England ijn Keith and Malcolm Clayton were playing as partners in a two-ball foursome match at the Worthing Oolf Club ounaay Keith drove from the first tee and. the ball .killed a seagull in flight. His brother Malcolm drove from the 15th tee with the same ball and killed a seagull in-flight. USED MARCKAKT Mcdel ACR-8M 1948 Model See Today FRIDEH CALCULATING Macl.ine Agency (29 Mein ', Phone 7412 By Jimmy Ilatlo SMS MAI?RlE WrJ GTTXNP NOI .-H.- iU'-l! t 1M One Injured In Accident An accident involving three ve nicies Saturday evening on U. S Highway 87, half a mile south' of' WillimriEon River bridge, resulted ,M A ... ...... ' "'in i "- i--i.m. out i! Mrs. Walter E. Wise, St., was taken to Klamath Valley Hospital by a Stale Patrolman for trealment of a sprained ankle. She Was riding In her husband's ! ear which reportedly sldeswlped uiosmooiie seoan sioppea on tnrn m .... n.e nln'y- Bolh head ;ed south. PoilC6 reported the Oldsmobilc. UI,V1-" rrLU " cca. ot i-ori. inuiu, n..u oiivini imo uie rear oi I an unidentified truck which did not I i , ... , . , - . stop. CHAINS NEEDED SALEM W The OrCRon Hlnh way Commission warned motorists Monday to carry chains In the 'Government Cuinp, Timberliiio, Warm Springs, Santlam Pass and Willamette Pass areas. Between 1 nnd 6 inches of new sr.ow fell ln the Cascades Sunday nlRht. wmm. ' r r j . i i r i it .. ' (lew Hampshire 0! bst-Minute ib Polificos By The Asioclutril Press With Sen. Tut I nunc. Ebeiihower Irudrr in i mined liiM-nilmile ral lies (or Monday iiiitht to awtiv ni muny voiers llu'lr wnv as io: Hlblt In Tuesday 's itlu-nmt-tiirk New tlnmpslilic preMilcnlliil primnry, The Ohio Senator, niter making the 1110M Intrusive three-day cum puluu nliv iiiesldciitlnl i-niidiilalD ever conducted ill New llnllliillic, headed lor Texas. Tail's ( iiml speeches on the rve ol his dcnni'luro nnphnMixd ill I (KF.A TrUpliola) CASHFUL-Salvatoro flar Datiy) lerrrnu shields his face in San Kriineisio police station as deleclive atlcinpls tn remove Ins hat for inspection. Tcrrano was one or 23 persons rounded up In the United Slates attack on nar cotics ring. Milam Travels In High Style NEW Dl.LMI Ml The Nlzmn ol Ilvccr.iuiul is bilnitlnu alonit lb ol his "C-v.uiii.iii mucin In liinr pl.uu'i to New Delhi Wedlicail.iV' for Ills fink visit ouutdc his state In 17 years. "Quite a lew of the girls wanted lo come alonu mid hcemed very uUiippoiniitl when his exalted highness decided to bs selective," one Indian of f U-in 1 Mild. The lio-year old prince was lurl nus when a xerles ol mishaps, In tludliiK KCtllitK Ills luce snliuhrd curliiK a rowboat trip In Madras Harbor, maircd hU last royul lour nev outside his home territory In 1135. Ill: vowed never lo take a din ouiMde the state naaln. Hut lie has relented lo attend a r.allonsl conlercnce ol provincial Kovornors nnd rcunl iicnd." ol Intel. Hyderabad actually Is gov erned now by n ministry composed of Prime Minister Nehru's Con ;res Harlv members. An advance pnrly ol 5J servants has arrived nnd Is erranKlnit to re open the Nizam's 100 room palace in New Dc in I ior a gaia pariy. Eyre Takes On Editor's Job PORTLAND. II'i David W. ; Eyre. 40, Monday became mnnng- lug editor of the Oregon Journal. He rcplnces Donnld J. Sterling,! 65, who has held the post for the : past 33 years,. E."rc has been assistant manag ing editor for the pbhI three yenrs. ; The position i was created when! Eyre relumed to The Journal alter' working briefly lor the Salem, Ore.,i Cnpltul-Journal. Eyre Joined The Journnl stuff In Portland In 1937. i Sterling enme lo Portland from1 Michigan In 1909. He was made mnnaaing editor 10 years later. A former president of the American Society of Newspaper Editors, nnd a former director of the Associated Press Managing Editors Associa tion, he served as n publishing and newsnaner consultant riinlnir World War II on the War Prrulnr-. lion Bmra- Y Equipment Fund Growing The Rotary Y Equipment Fund. ItrMr-li nnt-nnu (i-Am "fti.'i ....1. .iim.ii buiuin Hum lllltn PJIU nuua scrlptlons of individual members i of the Rotary club, had grown to S505 by last Friday's meeting, It was announced by Pies. Warren Bonnet. The fund will go for the purchase of equipment for the locally owned YMCA community center. Individual Rotnrlans. also have donated a radio-phonograph and u woodworking craft tool, it was an nounced. Beauty contests were a feature of the-offlclnl town fair, held twice a year In 18th Century Williams burg, Va. RELIEF AT LAST For Your COUGH i Creomulslonrellevesprompllybtcause it goes right lo the scat of the trouble to help loosen and expel germ laden phlegm and aid nature to soothe and heal raw, tender, inflamed bronchial membranes. Guaranteed to please you or money refunded. Creomulsion has stood the test of millions of users. nnifMID IISP I AIM Klsriilmwer won't bo a stliiim run ('lilulu nller lie MiiteH lib imllllriil vlewK, and I'Jl the biK inn Imlly nt In rinrrri hip uhmIiii Hie Tniniim ,uliiiliiitriillon nnd 11 ie Driiiiiiuii Inn. Cluv. Shrrimin Adiiius ill New lliiiiilislilre, mi Eg.eiiliuuer limn, luciueu Till I 111 ii lilllcr niii'itIi HiiihIiiv of bi'lim nil "ImiUIiuiiM" who Iiuh no under. sIiiiiiIiiik ol cut' i nil pivbleiii.s, 111 the niitlou'a lli.st iirehlilenllnl I'.rinuu v 'lue.sdiiy, exiieeted til liuve at kii.il ii iycliuluKli'iil liilliiinee on Inter tpvoltliiienlt iilioul 'li.UUO CiOl' vutpis iiiiiv turn out lo rliuuM) 14' niill'iiiiil eonveiilluii di'lruiile. About as.lWO Denim'rnls nio rx lli'i'lcd lo liniiic elKlil (tt'lruiile.i. In iiiidlllim to 'lull and. Kuril huwrr, lliuuld I!. Ulnweii la nil iicllvo C10I ciindUlulo In Iho prl nuiry. 'Cans HUH lr morn mmnm"" ivlille tliev weic 111 power limn me Dtmocrnls linve hnd." And he unld televWon Know Hint no linn" i .I,. Work Med Esty ai:.r a TvrtwBins r tnniM) siAriiisc l.ltcUla r tUnd Lul mnlh' rrnUi It V9tt4 U ! purth irlr. Pioneer Office Supply NEW LOW I Pork Sausage Bu,k lb. 39c Bacon s,iccd' Rc9U,fl; lb. : 43c Bacon ssrtrtPl-w 30c Bacon Pic o lb. 39c Lard Dc,Mon,c 21b. :30c Pork Kidney ,b. 19c Fryers E 11 lb. 69c EVERYDAY LOW MEAT PRICES Shoulder Steaks Shoulder Roast Loin Chops Pork Loin or Rib Pork Links Bacon Jowls Boiled Ham Pork Liver Shoulder Roast PRODUCE Peppers Oranges Gre.cn California Scene ISusEi md Up insed Ills hut III the rlna yel, but lie liu.t It In Ilia liuiid ready. 'i. AtinthtT KeimlilUnil Beniitnr, Miimll ol Hnutli Llukiilu, huld Uia (JOI' would hitvo "no cii!y time" wliinlilit In Niiveinbei' II Iho Drill u.Tiila luiiiiliiiiteil Men. ItiMnPll ol tlfoi'Kln. Mil licit lidded, however, 1 10 believed Ills parly would win even II HtiMi'll wrro liiunrd. Muiull i-i-lmrtl llin view ol Sen. Nlxnii iK C'iilll .i who sulU it would bo limit to bent Hll-lrl--fout that Truiiiiui would be ll euslent of .ill Drnioi nit 1c lininliiren lo (If lent. Nixon In biii'kliiK Uov, Karl Wurrrn ul Ciililornlii ior tlio CiOl' noiiii tin I ion. 3. Kepubllrnn Sen. Margaret Cliimn tinllli of Mulnn snld hn would like to sec : Klsenhower "I'oiiie liunin nnd cumiinliin II bo renlly wuiils lo be pre.iliknl." 4. I'm iiuil aiiiiouueeiiirnt was iiiuilo Unit Truiiinti, now In Key Wert, Fin., on a three-week vara. Hun, will ndilreis u Jiickion-Jeiler-ton Unv dliiner In Wnslilnutini Mn i t'll S. , 8re the New reroiiallril Cnran nirluhle .... IT TVI'KH I.IKK I.IISIilMNI) .... 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