Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, January 03, 1963, Page 10, Image 10

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    Jacob
On Bridge
NORTH J
QJ
K3
A1097
WEST EAST
AK852 74
VK63 54J .
10 4 4J9Hiei
K.852 Nons
SOUTH (D)
A A 10 3
VAJ108
AQ3
J63
Both vulnerable
South West North East
1N.T. Pass 4 Pass
4N.T. Pass 6N.T. Pass
Pass Pass
Opening lead 4 10
Slam Asked
By Gerfaer
By OSWALD JACOB Y,
WrHU-n for
' Newspaper Enterprise Assn.
The Gerber convenlion is simi
lar to Blackwood. It uses the
four - club bid to ask for aces,
instead of four no-trump. The con
vention has never achieved popu
larity except that many players
use the jump response of four u , 7 . , f . Z
ik. i LJ n.i,-mn in M lesLs for intoxication of a per
son arrested for drunken driving,
and would make it unlawful for a
person to drive or be in physical
control of a vehicle wniie nrunn.
Speed Law
Proposed
For Oregon
SALEM (UP1) - Thirty-nine
legislative changes including
establishment of speed laws and
drunk driving regulations were
proposed today by the Oregon
Legislative Highway Interim Com
mittee.
Rep. Norman R. Howard, D-
Portland, submitted the nmmit
tee's report to Gov. Mark Hatfield
today.
Seven of the proposed changes
involved traffic safety.
One would set the speed limit
at 25 miles per hour in school
and business zones, 30 mph in
residential zones, 65 mph on open
highways other than freeways
where the limit would be 70 mph.
"The proposal contemplates a
retention of the basic rule in its
present form," tbe committee
said. The basic rule makes it
illegal to drive in a manner that
is unsafe in view of weather ami
road conditions.
The drunk driving provisions
call for arrest on "probable
cause lor drunK ariving, cm-mi
clubs to an opening no-trump to
ask for aces and follow with five
clubs to ask for kings. In that sit
uation the bid proves very valu
able and is worth including in
your kit of bids if you are will
ing to take the trouble to learn it
Today's hand was played at a
recent tournament in which only
one North - South pair managed
to reach six no-trump. All others
played no-trump, but below the
fclam level,
With the club finesse the slam
is a laydown, hut even with the
finesse wrong declarer would have
a choice of finesses in the major
suits after losing the club.
After the game the experts had
no trouble showing how they
should have reached the slam if
their partners had only bid prop
erly, but Bobby Nail of Houston
got there simply by responding
four clubs to ask for aces and
then going to six when his part
ner showed three.
Bobby's analysis was worth re
peating. He said: "I have 14
points and a six-card suit. If my
partner holds the other three aces
he is sure to have a good play
fur six. If he has just one are I
will stop at four no-trump. If he
has two aces 1 will ask lor kings
and stop al live no-trump unless
he shows all three."
PAGE 10-A
HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls, Ore.
Thursday, January 3, 1963
7 tVc
-A
BELLE FEATURED Belle's First, entered by the city of Portland end the Portland Rose
Festival featurei the nationally-known mother elephant at the Portland zoo, end her
equally famous son, Pecky. The float if shown on Colorado Boulevard in Pasadena
during the Tournament of Roses Parade. UPI Telephoto
Share In Profits Of Automation
Urged For Laid-Off Rail Workers
Forest Service Errors
Result in Big Profits
The committee urged the legisla
ture to adopt standards for seat
belts, even though present law
hV.im nnl renuire installation ol
scat belts.
Another recommendation would
mako it unlawfu to drive the
wronB way on a one-way roan oi
one-way section of a freeway. Al
nresent there is no statute which
clearly lists wrong-way driving as
a violation, the committee stated
Authorizing the use of flashing
amber lamps on stale, counly or
other political subdivision vehicles
when used for omcial business al
so was recommended.
Other members of the interim
committee include Sens. Melvin
Goodc, R-Albany, Waller J.
'carson. D-Portlanri, and Anthony
Ylurri, R-Ontario, and Reps. Rob
ert L. Elfstrom, R-Salcm. W. 0.
Kclsay, D-Roschurg. and William
Bradley, D-Gresham.
Bank Tieup
Probe Urged
Q The biddinff has been:
East tiouth Went Nortl
I 1 Fan 3
Fast ?
You, South, hold:
AKJ7s V2 4AD43 4QS1
What do you do?
A Hid two diamonds. Too
want to see what jour partner
WW do next.
TODAY'S QUESTION
Your partner bids three clubs.
Now, what do you do?
Aniwer Tomorrow
Price Reduced
SAM KRANCISrO ll!Pt
Household gas bills in C'alilnniia
may be cut as much as $1 a
monlh as early as Ken. I. the
Stale Public Utilities Commission
said Saturday.
iieorge i.. tirnver. commission
president, said the, reduction re
sults from a consent order signed
by El Paso Natural Gas Co. and
nrcepted Friday by the Federal
Power Commission.
The order came in a 10-year-old
legal battle waged by Gov. Ed
mund G. Rrown, the attorney ten-
eral's office and the PUC for cuts
in wholesale gas prices.
Grovcr said the rale reductions
will save consumers an estimat
ed $16 million a year. He said the
exact amounls will be announced
aflrr conferences between PUC
officials and representatives of
utilities.
WASHINGTON (UPH-A presi
dcnlial board recommended today
that railroad employes who lose
Iheir jobs as a result of auloma
lion should share in the resulting
savings.
The recommendation was made
by an emergency board seeking
a basis for settlement of a strike
by the Brotherhood of Railway
Clerks against the Southern Pa
cific Co.
But it could establish a prece
dent in the job security dispute
involving all of the nation's rail
roads and various unions.
The recommendation is not
binding on either the company or
the union. It is intended to be
the basis of future negotiations.
the courts and emergency
boards have ruled in similar dis
pules in the past that railroads
should be allowed to discharge
employes displaced by automation
consolidations and abandonments.
THURSDAY
PROSPERITY KEREKAII
-ODGK NO. 104, 8 p.m., meeting,
IOOF Hall.
Y-NE-MA TW1HLKRS, A p.m.,
square dance, YMCA. Bring sandwiches.
DUPLICATE BRIDGE, Lakc
horc Duplicate Bridge Club, 7:30
p.m., city library.
VENTURE Cl.UR. 7:39 p.m..
business meeting. W'inema Hotel.
FRIDAY
LOOM. 7:30 p.m.. Mooso N'taht.
WASHINGTON mi l1 i nc Moose Home, Klin Pine
House Small Business Committee
said loday a study of the 200
larecst banks in the Federal Re
serve Svstem showed a whole
network of links among the top
stockholders."
he committee, led by Rep
Wrieht Patrnan, I)-Tox., said the
links were found particularly in
such financial centers as New
York. Chicago. Roslon. Philadel
phia. Detroit, Cleveland and Hart
lord. Conn.
Patrnan. who will head the
ouse Ranking Committee in the
new Congress, said the links sug
gest many areas of further in
quiry. Me said tney raised a
number of questions and ( en
gross "should probe behind Ihe
scenes."
Patrnan said any investigation
should explore such questions "as
to the extent to which such stock
holdings represent actual power
over management decisions, the
extent to which they may elimi
nate competition between banks in
Ihe principal linancial centers,
and whether they form a prelim
inary step in eventual merger
among banks."
Further investigation should be
made as to interlocking relation
ships between the large hunks
and large industrial and other
corporations, he said.
TIIETA HIV) GIRLS CLUB NO.
ft. 7:30 p.m., public installation.
IOOF Hall.
YMCA FAMILY NIGHT. 6:30.
politick, games and recreation,
YMCA. Bring table service, bev
erage.
SHASTA VIEW GRANGE, 0
m., meeting. Grange Hall.
ALOHA SOCIAL CLUB, O.E.S.,
1:45 p.m., meeting, Masonic Tem
ple.
NAACP. 7 p.m., meeting, Klam
ath County Library.
MT. l.AKI COMMUNITY CLUB,
pm., politick, ML Laki Farm
Bureau Hall.
MERRY MIXERS, p.m.,
square dance, Pelican City Hall.
Bring doughnuts.
SATURDAY
SHASTA BUILDING COMMIT
TEE. 8 p.m., card party, Com
munity Hall, Shasta Way and
Madison.
LOOM AND WOTM. 6:30 p.m.,
potluck, ham and scalloped pota
toes. Moose Home. Card party
to follow.
RAMBLING SQUARES, 7 to 0
p m., beginning square d;ince, 0
p.m., regular dance, Bob's Bain
.Bring rclreshmenls.
DUPLICATE BRIDGE, Klam
ath Rridge Club, 8 p.m., city
library.
MONDAY
EULAI.ONA CHAPTER. D.A.R..
8 p.m.. meeting and travclocue,
First Presbyterian Church.
TUESDAY
DUPLICATE BRIDGE. L a k e-
hoie Duplicate Bridge Club, 11
a m., citv hhraiv.
GUARANTEED REPAIR
SERVICE AT WARDS
Hilt phono, fariio. TV, dpoliAnc
. WArd thnlcn ut fi
phon. cAll flwAv! Vnu II Ijha th
lervict . . . and thi pric.l C A 1 1
todoyt
MONTGOMERY WAftn
SERVICB DEPARTMENT
TU 4-llU fth & Pint
They also said discharged em
ployes should be given adequate
severance pay, but had not sue
gested that the workers share in
the savings of automation.
The question of pay for dis
charged employes arose during
the mid-1950s when the railroads
began laying off clerks whose jobs
could be done by machines.
from iu;7 tnrougn 196! rr-nre
than 4.500 positions, or almost 40
per cent of the clerk jobs, were
eliminated by Southern Pacific
while traffic over the line's 8,000
miles of track increased 11.6 per
cent.
On Sept. 22, 1958, the brother
hood notified the Southern Pacific-
it wanted 100 per cent income
protection for five years for work
ers laid oil due to automation
The railroad rejected the de
mand and the union called a
strike. The strike was delayed
when the emergency ' board was
appointed last January.
The board, headed by .1. Keith
Mann, Stanford, Calif., found that
abolition of jobs had caused hard
ship to employes laid off in a
time of "excessive national un
employment."
The parties have 30 davs in
uhich to decide whether to accept
tbe recommendations. After that
time the union would be Iree t
set another strike date in the
event of a continued dispute.
Death Rumor
NEW YORK (UPH-The show
business newspaper Variety re
imrted today that Bctte Davis'
awyor telephoned the actress at
her home last week when he
heard a rumor that she had died.
Variety said Miss Davis told at
torney Tom Hammond, "with the
newspaper strike on I wouldn't
consider it."
WASHINGTON (UP!)- Govern
ment auditors disclosed today
forest service mistakes had re
sulted in windfall profits to un
identified private interests that
acquired timber lands in the
Rogue River National Forest in
Oregon.
The general accounting office
(GAO) reported to Congress a re
view of two land exchanges show
ed that the forest service had un
derestimated timber values. The
result, it said, was that private
parties were able to sell timber
lands they acquired in the ex
change for $207,000 more than the
appraised value.
In one exchange, in January
1960, timber lands were acquired
at the appraised price of $76,060
and a month later sold for $225,
OOO, according to the report.
It added that in the second ex
change, in May 19ti0, the timber
land was appraised at $25,260 but
the following month sold for
$83,500.
A GAO examiner said that in
one case the ultimate purchasers
of the timber lands had cut 98
per cent more timber than the
forest service had estimated.
The GAO report said Carroll E.
Brown, forest supervisor for the
Rogue River service, had told ex
aminers that the major part of
the differences between estimates
and the actual cut had been due
"to the use of improper volume
tables.
The examiner said they also
had studied two exchanges in the
Siuslaw National Forest. Although
they said there was "erroneous
and unsupported data" in records
of the transactions, they did not
report significant underestimates
of timber values.
The four exchanges reviewed by,
the examiners were among nine
made during the period under
study.
The GAO said it had recom
mended to Forest Service Chief
Edward P. Cliff that appraisal
methods be tightened up to pre
vent inaccurate estimates.
Cliff agreed that the findings
shuwed a need for a review of
appraisal procedures but express
ed fear that the GAO comments
on the two cases would "reflect
unfavorably on the land exchange
program as a whole.
He said land exchanges had
been "outstandingly successful"
in providing a more logical pat
tern of federal ownership through
acquisition of private lands with
in national forest boundaries.
Profile Mountain, in the Fran-
coma range of western New
Hampshire, was the inspiration
tor Hawthorne's "The Great
Stone Face."
4, -
if f J- ; k h
ti is
SEN. KERR DIES Sen. Robert S. Kerr, who died in
Washington Jan. I at age 66, was considered by many to
be the most powerful man in Congress. Kerr, a prime mov
er for most Kennedy legislation, accomplished a sur
prising feat in October, 1961. Kennedy visited Kerr's
ranch to inspect the Senator's prize Black Angus (top)
and at the same time Kerr brought about Kennedy's
worst congressional defeat when he teamed up with Sen.
Dirksen (bottom photo) to wreck the Medicare bill.
UPI Telephoto
9th & Pine
EMERGENCIES
and
ESTIMATES
BUD KENNEY
Plumbing ft Htating
1 1 A i. Mth TV 4-MftX invtlmt
Guanntvid the Finttt Strvicc
KLAMATH
Radiator Works
H01 ia. ilk
TU 4-6942
JwWyl i In Mai ftapa i mil (mimm
G ALLEN K AMP'S
SHOE CLEARANCE
mvi u to sok no mohi on tHon ton tviny memsid of th iiiir
STARTS TOMORROW
Many Other Items Too Numerous To Mention!
r Women's
Flats and Casuals
Vorioua colon and ityln
all at this low prtct!
Voluci
to $5
377
"V
Women's
FUZZY CHOWS
W bought too mony our
loft, vour profit"
Volui
to
"V
' Women's
DRESS KEELS
Saving folor priced juit
nqht (or your pocket!
Values
to
Children's
OXFORDS
School or ploy thoct for your
child ntcdi!
to $5 C
't . )J
if UK IIcaTcS! i I
,"if, ' " 1 1 . ' iHIUltv.l(K'u'rt . v..r?.l
Stores also in Med ford and Eugene
7M Main Open Kridoy Night Till 9
Ph. 2 9372
Phone TU 4-3188
No money down on credi? at Wards-just say "Charge It!
. ...
tvt
Always first quality I Scoop
up the savings! Hurry in! j
W,X .Sin m
mi
: v " - ' J '.- -V- v . IKT JJt Jit
16 OFF! solid 'n' striped towels
ABSORBENT COTTON TERRY
Luxury for your bath, beauty for your bath
room! Rich, thirsty cotton terry towels in refresh
ing pastel solids and multi-colored stripes.
Hand towels, regularly 39e each. . .3 for 99
Wash cloths, regularly 19c each. . . .6 for 99e
SAVE 80c! BATH
MAT, LID COVER
t-pu i.i
Nubby textured cotton
set has a loop design
with heavy cut pile
border and skid resist
ant back. 5 colors.
for
22x44" long, bath ilie, rag. 59c each
SAVE 32 ON SIX
UTILITY CLOTHS
.o 77c
Value-priced Uxl5"
cotton cloths reg. 1 9e
each. Woven terry on
one side, multi-color
flat weave on reverse.
SPREADS $2 OFF!
REG. 9.98. REVERSIBLE HEIRLOOM
96
Early American tradition in
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Heirloom design spreads of
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won't shrink. Reverses for
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T
twin o run H7I
9th & Pine O Store Hours 9:30 to 5:30 Daily O Phone TU 4-3183