BASIN BRIEFS FOOT KLAMATH MR. AND MRS. FRANK STRA HAN spent the Christmas and New Year holidays visiting rela tives at points in the Rogue Riv ier Valley, and last week Mrs IStrahan resumed her position I teacher in the local elementary ; School. t ! PFC. STEPHEN POPE, U. .Army, returned to White Sand: ; Proving Grounds, N.M., after ! furlough spent here with his par- ' ents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred L. Pope Before being transferred In early August to New Mexico, he was stationed for 18 weeks at Redstone Arsenal, Huntsville, Ala. On the trip to and from Fort Klamath he stopped at Saratoga, Calif, see his aunt and family and his grandmother, the Dick Stone breakers and Mrs, Norma Ott Portland, visiting at Saratoga with her daughter and family. MR. AND MRS. ALONZO JONES have rented the residen tial property of Mrs. Wesley Smith, former residents now li ing in Klamath Falls. They moved last weekend from Uioir former location at the Mann Varnum place on Wood River. WILBUR B. IfESCOCK is re cuperating at Sacred Heart Hospi tal, Medford, from surgery Jan 7. A long-time resident here with his family, Hescock has been em ployed 11 years as equipment op erator in Crater Lake National . Park. Messages will reach him at Room 319, Sacred Heart Hospital Medford. I'I'L. WYNN HESCOCK re turned last week to Camp Pendle ton Marine Base after spending a furlough with his parents, the W. B. Hescocks. With him at tho Hescock home during his visit were two fellow Marines, Cpl Philip Espidee of New Milford, Conn., and Pfc. Hboert Togtman of Chicago. Going south with the .trio as far as Saratoga was Pfc 'Stephen Pope. '.. CLAUS REIMERS JR. has re covered from a severe fall sus tained at his home before Christ mas. He is now able to be up and around again. '' MALIN MR. AND M1US. WAYNE FISK of Portland were overnight guests of Mr. and Mrs. 1-ouis Kalina last week. They were en route south for a two-week vacation. THE TED DeMERRITTS had as holiday guests, their daughters, Nancy from University of Oregon Nursing School, Portland, and Jo- Ann of Walnut Creek; and sons, David from Oregon State Col lege, and Ted C. and family of Sacramento. MRS. ALICE OLSEN has re turned from a six-week vacation. She visited her son, Peter, and family In Westminster, Calif.; nephew, Herbert HaasRarud, Ber keley; and sisters, Lillian Haas garud of Minneapolis, and Flo rence Satre of Frost, Minn. MRS. JOE FABIANEK returned from Salem where she accompa nied her daughter, Wanda Sarutz ki, who" entered Merit Davis Busi ness School. She and Pat Hen derson, former student of Malin, are roommates there. MRS. ANNA SCHMIDT visited last week in Medford with her son, Rudolph, and family. MR. AND MBS. CLYDE VN. RI'll and Barbara have returned after spending two weeks on va cation. They visited Mrs. Unruh's father, Jonas Koehn, in Montezu ma, Kan., and Unruh's motlier. Mrs. Lena Smith of Canton, Kan. They also visited friends in Sil verton, Tex. ; KIRBY WILSON of tlie Moun tain Home, Idaho, Air Force .Base, spent the holiday week ,with his parents. Mr. and Mrs. llalbert Wilson, and other rela tives. MRS. C. C. BI.OHM has re turned to her home after spend- j mg several months in Portland MR. AND MBS. RICHARD BY- r.M.Y and family of Walla Walla visited Byerly's sistrr and family. Rev. and Mrs. Etlien Whitman, recently. I MRS. LEON BRONSON and 'Mrs. Owen Bobbins of Klamath Falls were Sunday guests of Mrs. Emma Wilson, MR. AND MRS. DALE HOI.I. and family have moved lo tlie Dr. Pearson home near Malm, which they recently purchased. MR. AND MRS. BOB 1101,1. visited in Medford last week with her brother and wile, Mr. and Mrs. Harmond Loveness. MBI1Y BYRNE, student at Do minican Convent, San Rafael, has returned lo school alter spending some time with her par ents, Mr. a.id Mrs. Robert Byrne. ! - MR, AND MRS. EARL WIL-J SON'S recent guests were their daughters, Itox Ann, of Anchor age, AJa.ska, and Mr. and Mrs. I, Ivan Vaughn of Portland, and their son, Harry, of the Great Lakes Naval Training Center, REV. AND MRS. WILLIAM SALADIN of Phoenix, Ore., spent a few days recently as the guest's of Rev. and Mrs. Ethen Whitman. MRS. E.MMALINE SHEPHERD and Darrell, Portland, spent the holidays with Mrs. Shepherd's mother, Mrs. Emma Wilson. MR. AND MRS. LOYAL LOVE- NESS, Harlan and Lorcn, spent the holidays in Phoenix, Ariz.. with their daughter and family, Dr. and Mrs. Michael O'Harra.l Dick Powell's Estate Tops SI Million Mark LOS ANGELES IUPD - Actor- producer Dick Powell left most of his million-dollar estate to his wife, actress June Allyson, and Ihcir two children. Terms of his will, filed for pro bate Wednesday, disclosed Powell's estate was "in excess of (1 million." His attorney F.ugcnc S. Goodwin said it still was too early lo tell exactly how much it will amount to. The 20-page will of the actor who died of cancer Jan. 2 also left 3,000 shares of Four Star Television Co. stock to each of his grown children by a previous marriage, Mrs. Ellen Hayward and Norman Scott Powell. The remainder was left to Miss Allyson and their adopted daugh ter Pamela, 14, and son, Richard, 12. Trust funds were set up for the children providing they re ccive one-fourth of tlie estate at ages 24, 30, 35 and 40. In connection with the stock be quests to the two grown children, Powell wrote, "I am confident they will understand that my fail ure to provide for them in this will is not due lo any lack of af fection for them, but is due to the arrangements 1 have made (or them during my lifetime." Clark Named Leon Clark, general secretary of! the Klamath County YMCA, has recently been named to member ship on "Work with Younger Boys and Girls" of the National Coun cil of tlie Young Men's Christian! Associations, according to Ralph S. Mason, New York City, chair man of the committee on youth program. The committee is composed of men and women representing all! sections of the United States. It is charged with the responsibility of developing major YMCA pro gram policies and strategy in work with boys and girls not yet in high school. 'I feel my appointment an hon or and an opportunity to serve the greater 'Y' movement," said Clark. THE LIGHTER SIDE Congress Opening Likened To Gangster Funeral By DICK WEST WASHINGTON (UPD My mental impressions are not always as reliable as plaster of pans, but the opening of the 83th Con gress in some ways reminded me of a gangster s funeral. Among other tilings, there were gatherings of relatives dressed to the nines, profuse sproutings of hot house flowers and lines of cu rious onlookers. Such trappings are associated in my mind with the last rites of a prohibition era crime czar. I half expected to see a horseshoe wreath with a streamer reading So long,, pal. But if the background was some what funereal, the spirit that pre vailed was more like old home week. There is no wanner cam araderie than the reunion of pol iticians who have survived an election. Fully 30 minutes before the ses- shook hands with themselves, Then began the ceremonial op ening, which is as highly stylized as the mating dance of the whoop ing crane. But each chamber does it differently, The Senate, being a continuing body, knew in advance who its sion began at noon, senators and j presiding officer would be Vice congressmen were assembling in President Lvndon B. Johnson, as their respective chambers to stinulated in the Constitution. catch up on their handshaking Group Handshaking Noted They shook hands with each other individually, and then they shook hands with each other in groups, ring - around-the-rosy stvle. Occasionally, they even The Constitution doesn't stipu late Johnson exclusively, however. Any vice president will do. The Senate proceeded swiftly to the swearing in of new mem bers, most of whom actually were old members. Among the return ees was the 84-year-old dean of the Senate, Sen. Carl Hayden, D Ariz. ' Didn't Catch Name Among the newcomers was a 30-year-old Massachusetts Demo crat whose name I didn't catch Cannady, or something like that. The House knew in advance who its presiding officer would be. too, but it had to pretend that it didn't. It must elect a speaker every two years. McCormack must have been confident of the outcome. Copies of his extemporaneous acceptance speech reached the press gallery even before the voting started. Harold Baughman New Lakeview CofC Chief LAKEV1EW - Harold Baugh man, district manager for the Pa cific Power and Light Company, has been elected president of the Lake County Chamber of Com merce for 1963. Announcement of the election was made at the regu lar luncheon meeting of the cham ber Monday at noon. He succeeds William Castle. Other officers are Jack Pendle ton, vice president, and James Lampkins. treasurer. Trow Long is . secretary-manager. Directors are Jewel Corum, Louis Withers, Paul J. Brattain, Charles Crump. Con Taylor, Jim Snider, Ralph Renner, C. W. O g I e, Donald Simms. John McDonald. Rudy Mc Lane, Carter Fetsch, Charles Hood, Don Hotchkiss, Jack Pen dleton, Harold Baushman. Bill Castle, Thomas Flynn. James Lampkins. Ed Casto, Leslie Shaw, and T. R. Conn. Installation of officers will be held at the annual banquet some time this month. Tlie tentative date is Jan. 26. At this time the announcement of the junior and senior citizen awards for the past year will be made. D. I I f -5 HAROLD BAUGHMAN Pulitzer Prize Winner To Speak At University g0 r ' - - rni 5 of j, " ' .' I f A I II I I if If U It M l I-N. S I I JT t II V "V I ' 111 1 - 1 i I f-W ' ! ri'r ni'iTi'Vimii"! "'n"n"itrviiMiiiriiinin''T-r"T,r""r ' ' i ril,'HTrr'i'";'j"71'''1'111''1 "7 . I , ", ',"""" V" '""''"iii'iiTOiim i' 'J'-V . AjfJyJ Tenderest, juiciest pork roast you ever tasted! Safeway Loin Pork Roast. L flV 6 PlllI ' ' 5' V" " llf Finepinkmeatfromyoungporkers' " i Mil "ll.y - ? rJ& Well Trimmed of excess fat II fjfl I 1 fl (j y V . Unbeatable for Quality ... Flavor. ill Vfplil A pulitzcr Prize-winning Wash ington correspondent will be on the University of Oregon campus ui a double role during February. Clark R Mollenhoff, correspond ent at Washington for the Cowles publications, will be the Eric Al len Memorial speakei at the 44th Annual Press Conference of the Oregon Newspaper Publishers As sociation and the School of Jour nalism Feb. 15. He will also spend several days earlier in the same week as a 50th Anniversary visit ing lecturer in the School of Jour nalism. Mollenhoff's Allen memorial ad dress will deal with the "man- ged news" controversy that de veloped as a result of restrictions on press releases during the Cu ban emergency. Mollenhoff won the Pulitzer Prize for national reporting in 1938, after his work as a Wash ington correspondent for tlie Des Moines and Minneapolis papers and Look magazine had earned a succession of other awards. He had received two awards from Sigma Delta Chi. national profes- South Carolina Governor Supports Desegregation In Farewell Speech COLUMBIA, S.C. (UPD - Gov. Ernest F. Hollings told (he legis lature Wednesday ir. a farewell address which sparked a standing ovation that South Carolina must accept desegregation peacefully or be content with second-class statehood. We have all argued that the sional journalism fraternity, in Supreme Court decision of May, 1953 and 1955. In 1956 he had re ceived the Raymond Clapper Award and the Heywood Broun Award, both for achievements in investigative reporting at the na tional capitol. 1954, is not the law of the land. said Hollings, a 41-year-old attor ney. "But everyone must agree that it is the fact of tlie land." Hollings' speech was in sharp contrast to Tuesday's goodbye Pork Sausage Morre,, s pbp13s$1 Spareribsffi: !1 ,b. 49c Pork Roast irstefree' , 49c Loin-end Roast ygt. 43c Link Sausage SSS mi,dly , 69c address to the Alabama legisla ture by Gov. John Patterson. Patterson urged tha Alabama, which with South Carolina are the only Southern states with no school integration, oiler the "full est resistance" to desecreeation and "never surrender." Hollings said that interposition. sovereignly, legal motions, and personal defiance all have been applied to constilutionalize the law of the land and all attempts have failed. South Carolina, he said, is running out of courts. If and when every legal rem edy has been exhausted, this Gen eral Assembly must make clear South Carolina's choice a govern ment of laws rather than a gov- eminent of men," said Hollings,' who will be succeeded by former undersecretary of slate and ex University of South Carolina Prcs-I ident Donald S. Russell. Even as Hollings spoke, t h e U.S. 4lh Circuit Court of Appeals in Alexandria, Va., was hearing! arguments on a suit by Harvey Ganlt, a Negro, to enter Clem- son College later this month. The court took the case under ad visemcnt. Jacoby On Bridge Try them Barbecued ... try them baked . . . Delicious! Fresh Meaty small size ribs. Delicious sweet meat, tender and juicy. POUND areri bs Chops Steaks Pork Pork Pork Roast Piece Bacon Center-rib Chops. Finest quality pork, Lean meaty cuts from the pork butt. Boston butt. Minimum of bone. Meaty. Armour Star. Lean sides. Half or Whole. ' ; 1 c lb. 49 13 49f, Half or Whole c lb. "Home Freezer Special" Cut and wrapped to your specifications. Includes roasts and center-cut chops. . . . lb. A't NORTH 10 AQ4 vaq;i AKS8 AJ2 WEST (D) EAST 4.AJ10987 452 ?IA VK8S2 QJ 10942 108S 743 SOUTH AK83 V1094 753 KQ98 North and South vulnerable Wert North Eut South 2 A Double Pass 2 N.T. Pasg 8 N.T. Pass Pass Pas Opening lead A J Weak Bid Backfires By OSWALD JACOBY Written for Newspaper Enterprise Assn. Howard Schenken is a contem porary of mine; while his part ner, Peter Leventritt. is about half a generation younger. Peter is a partner in New York's Card School, which is the most success ful teaching group in the country. I have known Peter since he was a baby. His fattier used to play bridge with my father in those days. When Jim was a baby, Mrs. Jacoby and I used to play tennis against Peter and his brother who were students at Princeton at that time. Peter Is a former President of the American Contract Bridge League and has been one of our top players for 20 years. West's opening was one of those weak two bids which are very popular in expert circles. This time the bid backfired since it gave Peter the key to making his contract. It wasn't really a tough play. The weak two bid invariably h dicates a six card suit, so Peter simply let tlie jack of spades hold the first trick. West continued with the ace and another spade. Peter won and tried the heart finesse. It lost but East had no spade to lead and Peter made one spade, three hearts, two dia monds and four clubs for a to tal of 10 tricks. 1 Candi-Cane Pure Cane bag Shady Lane BUTTER Sweet Creamery ib. LUCERNE COTTAGE CHEESE Controlled Quality Qt. 38c Vi gal. 75c Pt. 2 rHiniilidi LOW PRICES, PLUS VALUABLE GOLD BOND STAMPS 91 Tout Catsusp Larae hm ma mju mJt Cream o' the Crop Dozen V ji w y inpesi: u nn Highway, rich tomato flavor 14-0 1. btl. Grated. Grand for casseroles. No. Vj can Iced Milk LEMON CUSTARD DELICIOUS DESSERT Vi ooi. 4-9' Extra Fancy Winesap APPL II W W n n r?o Best Foods, whole egg 32-oz. jar. (Nu Made, 24-oz. 35c) Bel-air, frozen, premium quality. Mrs. Wright's Breakfast Treat Cinnamon Rolls pkg. 35c The Golden Home and High School Encyclopedia Help them to learn more; to earn more. Volume 1 through 19 on tale now. All purpose apple favorite dessert . . . for baking, apple Apple Pie! sauce, or . your Q The bidding hu been! South Wot North Eut 1 Pau 1 Ptu IV Fa- 1 Fass 8 ' Past ' SN.T. Pais T You, South, holdi AQ7 VAQ7 KJS9 What do you do? A Bid four tpada. Tea bare a atronr preference or pdt orar no-tramp. TODAY'S QUESTION Instead of biddinar on roads over your one heart, your part ner bids one no-tmmn. What do you do In this case? Anawer Xontorrow lb, No, Vol. No. 1 49" Apple Sauce 0H(t: All Others . Complement 303 con $129 I 611.00 FaoKCjf iaiaia Everyone's favorite! Golden, ripe bananas. Wum pNa Mandarin Oranges, 11 oz Grapefruit Sec tions, 303 can, Spinach, VA can. MIX or MATCH YOUR CHOICE U W8 WttT PI5 Cut & Sliced Beans, Cream or Kernel Corn, Peas and Fancy Tomatoes. 303 can. MIX or MATCH ICE CREAM Lucerne Party Pride Cherry Vanilla Choc. Chip Almond Coffee Peppermint Candy Choc. Marshmollow Vanilla Banana Nut Macadomio Nut Choc. Marble Butterbrickli - Spumoni Butter Pecan Neapolitan Maple Nut. YOUR CHOICE Half Gal. 69 U.S. No. 1 Netted Gems Potatoes Calif. Fuerte Vty. Large Avocados Med. Yellow Fish Dinners Captain's Choice ScaMoo, each 49c 10-Lb, Bag Each 49' Onions 4-Lb Bag Florida Ruby Red 19c Grapefruit 29 If's New! It's Terrific 1 ??S LUCERNE mm -mr mm m m mm Orange Juice Tomato Juice Zee Tissue For ba,hroom De-Icing Salt Lc Town House. Noturol r sweet 46 01. con Town House. Appetucr 46 oi. can eslie 4-roll pock 30-lb. tock 39c 19c 39c 79c We Give GOLD BOND STAMPS Get MORE Famous Gifts FASTER For LESS books, Less Total Stamps. 1 -lb. pkg CaU fplAp Busy Baker Black Pepper Crown Co,ony 4.0, ,s. Dial Soap F Corn Flake Crumbs Aqua. Regular bars Kellogg's 9' 2 01. pkg 49c 33c 233c 31c fr., ) r" ""- - "-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiirnrfnfniiintiiiniiiirfl i'"'' lr-in nn i mm Prices effective Thursday, Jan. 10 through Sunday, Jan 13, at Safeway in Klamath Falls. We reserve the right to limit. ICI COPYRIGHT, 1M3 6AIIWAT ITOKU, IM-OBPORATtO JlWEEXS JUICE 43e ORANGE JUICE Wonderfully deli cious health drink. Rich in Vitamin C OSEA Opens Scholarship Competition SALEM (Uri) - The O r t gon SUile Employes Association (OSEA) has opened competition for its filth annual college schol arships and grants-in-aid pro gram, it was announced today. The applications are limited to high school seniors belonging to immediate families of state em ployes who are members of OSEA chapters supporting the awards. The scholarships ara worth $100 a college quarter, or $300 a year. and are based primarily upon scholarship. Grants-in-aid are worth $220 per quarter, or $6fiO a year. These are awarded (or scholarship and evidence of need. Three scholarships and three grants-in aid were awarded in 1962. bringing the total number of students assisted by the pro gram to 15. Last year, 30 of the OSEA's S3 chapters supported the program. Frost Said 'Doing Well' BOSTON (UPD Puli tier Prize winning poet Robert Frost, 88, Wednesday wes reported in fair condition and "doing well" after additional minor surgery to pre vent further blood clotting. Frost suffered a small blood clot in a lung Tuesday and doctors permanently tied off the major blood veins In his legs to prevent further embolization. The surgery, performed under local anesthesia, lasted about one hour. Smaller veins were adequate to take over circulation of blood in his legs, doctors said. Officials said the surgery would have no effect on Frost's ability to walk. The tying-otf process was to prevent clots from getting Into the poet's lungs and to confine the embolism to the leg region, doctors said.