7 Basin Briefs MERRILL MR. AND MRS. 1S0M PATTKR SON attended the Rose Parade in Pasadena on New Year'a Day. MR. AND MRS. JIM GUTHRIK and family, Mr. and Mrs. Darrell W. Guthrie, and Darrell L. Guth rie, Mai in, all traveled to Port land for the holidays. MR. AND MRS. ELLIS WILSON and family visited relatives in Merrill over the New Year. The! Wilsons are now living In Ash land where he is attending col lege. MR. AND MRS. W. P. CASSKR of Blocksburg. Calif., visited i week with their son and family Mr. and Mrs. Bill Gasser, after the Christmas holiday. W. C. AINSWORTH was re leased from the Veterans Hospi tal last week and is living with his daughter, Mr. and .Mrs. Paul Comstoek. He will remain there for the winter months, and letters will reach him in care of Paul Comstoek, Star Route, Melba, Idaho. MRS. NELI.IK RASKINS re turned to her home Saturday after spending a few days in the hospi tal for medical treatment. BONANZA BILL MILNK of St. Barnabas Episcopal Church will hold con firmation classes at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jim Stevenson Jr. in Langell Valley on Sunday, Jan 20, at 7:30 p.m. Interested adults are invited to attend. PAGE C-A HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls, Ore. Sunday, January 20, 19631 in f III' :. i , . U U i If: ' 7 I ' i fl,l..TI,ilii Cpinword Puzzle Explanations Make Solutions Easier For Contestants In Next Week's Game OLD-FASHIONED METHOD With the mercury dropping to new record lows in the Midwest, this 4-year-old Indiana girl has solved the ear-warming problem with the old-fashioned hot water bottle method. More cold hit the area this weekend. All-State Band Picks Trio From Lakeview High School MRS. EARL I1ITSON SR. spent several days in San Francisco. MR. AND MRS. LESTER LEA VITT visited at the home of Mrs Mabel Clark, Klamath Falls, on Monday. Her son. T.Sgt. Donald Clark, and his wife and two chil-J dren were visiting her for a few days. They have been at Fort Meyers Air Force Base and are now being transferred to Brazil. He was reared in Langell Valley and attended Bonanza schools. MRS. OSCAR PETERSON and Mis. Jimmy Nork are giving a card party for the benefit of the Bonanza Library on Jan. 26 8 p.m., at the library. Pinochle! and bridge will be played and there will be prizes and refresh ments. . MRS. EVEA ADAMS and Mrs. Rulh Adams, Klamath Kails spent a lew days on Hie coast fulling. j BONANZA PArtENTS AND PA TMONS will mecl in the school auditorium 8 p.m. Jan. 23. Coach Bob Frcirich will give a talk on physical fitness and members of i the fnth and sixth grades wul give demonstrations. FRED KERNLL'NI) arrived home Jan. 14 to visit his parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Fernlund, and oilier relatives, lie has been stationed at the Navy ha.ve in Newfoundland and is now being transferred to Washington, D.C. MRS. FRANK sn.VA, Jeff and Maria of Tleasanlon are spend ing a few weeks with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Letter Leavilt. JOHN MrFAt.L, 77. was taken to Klamath Valley Hospital for treatment on Jan. 15. He spent several weeks in Hillside Hospital beiore the holidays. PREDICTS I9ta BLASTOFF ' LYONS, France IUPI - The first French satellite w ill be launched on schedule in 1!;S il H'lcnUvts continue their pi'eent rale of work on spaie research, a French olficial said here Friday LAKEVIEW Three members ofj the Lakeview High School Band have been accepted into mem-i bership in the All-State Band, ac cording to word received by John Jordan, instructor of instrumen tal music. The students are Janet i Paris, senior, who will play first saxophone: Karen Anderson, jun ior, second oboe; and Marie Dcm- ing, junior, third clarinet. The group will meet in l'oruana March 20-22, during spring vaca tion. It is composed of outstand ing band members from all over Oregon. The LHS variety show will be; held this year on Feb. 15. with tryouts scheduled three weeks licfore the show. The olficers of the chorus class will serve as a ommittce for the tryouts. This an oil-school affair and prol- ils will be used to finance music activities. Lakeview High School is now one o three high schools in Oregon which has installed new desks and geometric models lor aid in study of mathematics. The desks are design. Other new mathematical equipment is being added to the department. Full responsibility for manag Integration Suits Filed ing the concession booth, selling tickets, taking tickets, and wel coming spectators to games, has been placed on the members ofj Vikings, activity group of the Lakeview High School. The fac ulty has determined that the group docs not need adult super vision. Two shifts of six Vikings are assigned for each game. WASHINGTON (UPIl-The Jus- lice Department Saturday filed suits seeking desegregation of 'impacted area" schools near four major military installations in Ala bama, Mississippi and Louisiana. "Impacted" schools are those which receive federal aid because they arc overcrowded by students whose parents are employed by military or other federal installa tions nearby. Alty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy said the schools involved in Satur day's suit educate large numbers of children of servicemen and civilians working at dclcnse in-Mallatinns. They arc; built on two levels. The higher level Includes tables of natural nedstone Arsenal at Hunts functions, trigonometry funclions.Ljn. a in and common logarithms of trigo nometry functions, witn propor tional parts printed on the desk The lower level, flat and rectan gular, has tables of the Greek alphabet, common symbols, square roots and cube roots, and II area and volume formulas. Lc- neath this are three shelves for liooks and oilier storage. These desks are of the latest Worker Falls Four Stories PORTIAND i CPU- Inland A. Jells, 2fl, Portland, was killed when he fell four stones down an air .shall Thursday. lells. an employe of Morehouse Glass Co., fell from a in-loot lad der through a cover on the air shaft while -working on the roof nf the Paul G. Gross Building. He uas installing windows in a neigh Imnng building. The Alaska moose is the larg est member nf the deer family. It develops antlers six feet across. Brooklcy Air Force Base at Mobile, 'Ala. heesler Air Force Base at Biloxi-Gulfporl. Miss. Barksdale Air Force Base in Bossier Parrish. Ala., Kennedy said all four suits con tended that racial segregation of service children in the schools of these counties violated the 14th Amendment to the Constitution. The government said it also dam ages the morale of servicemen and federal civilian workers. A department spokesman said the (our counties weie chosen for Ihe suits because "it was found that voluntary compliance was im possible. He said all the bases were large and involved a con- iderable number of children. The sioke.sman also said nego tiations looking toward desgrega- linn were under way in "more than a dozen oilier areas where it might he possible lo reach vol untary agreement wilh local of-licials." Astronomy Study Set EUGENE (UPD-The first re search observations in astronomy ever tried in Oregon will be con ducted somewhere in the hich Cascades this summer by Univer sity ot Oregon physics professor bhnighausen. Dr. Ebbighauscn has received a 55,500 giant from the National Science Foundation lor Ihe proj cel. The exact location of the ob servatory has not been deter mined. The university's 15-inch telescope which noimally rests stop Ihe science building has been removed and is being rennvaled (or the project. Astronomical observations have been made in Oregon for many years, but this will be the (irst lime fundamental research has been attempted. Dr. Ebbighauscn said. His chief inlerest will lie in studying the brightness of certain slars. Dr. Ebbighauscn said he also hopes to demonstrate that re search in astronomy is feasible in Oregon, especially at high alti tudes during the summer months when the air is clear and visibility good. EXPLANATIONS ACROSS 3. A NASTY manner can be overdone, becoming most offen sive. A NATTY manner would be a neat or tidy behavior and could not be overdone. 5. An appetizing PANTRY or one attractively stocked, invari ably attracts youngsters. An ap petizing PASTRY Auvt not invari ably attract youngsters, since it could be hidden. 7. A legal judgment could DE FER or delay payment by a bank to one ot its depositors wno owed money. It would not be likely to entirely DETER or pre vent navment bv the bank toi anyone. When a lion tamer in a cir cus gets into a CAGt ne is usually ready to perlorm. He might get into his CAPE some time before marching out into the arena. in A slore owner is always. n,nnl about his NEW prof- its. He is not always concerned about his NET profits, but only periodically, when he sees an ac count of them. 11. EYES make love convinc ingly. AYES, or verbal aff irma-1 used and, therefore, be no haz- lions no not always convince. 12. If someone AIDED correct ly the result should be okay. If a column of figures is ADDED cor rectly, the result might not be okay or all right to someone who hoped for a different result. 14. A HEARTH is comforting on Forest Jobs Completed YRKKA Work moiects auth-! orized under the Accelerated Pub lic Works Porgram on the Uko- nom District of the Klamath For est were completed on Dec. 31, ac cording to District Ranger George Coombcs. Included in the accom plishments were the rehabilitation of eight miles of grounded tele phone line from Dillon Creek to Stanshaw Creek, replacement of 110 poles on the Salmon Riverj line between Grant CreeK ana Fern Flat, complete brushing of five and one-half miles of line from Grant Creek lo Murderer's Bar, and brushing of one mile of road right-of-way near Ukonom Lookout. Employes of the Siski you leiepnone (company nung two and one-halt miles ot tine where poles were replaced. To accomplish this work up to 18 men were employed lor a total of 548 man days. In addition, two mules worked 34 mule days drag ging new poles in place over the rough terrain. The men were quartered and boarded at Ti Bar and Oak Bot tom Station and the mules were pastured nlJ Joe Miller's place at Butler Flat. These work projects were ad ministered hy District Fire Con-' trol Officer Zack Walton. liiffA : My e g A, IIP EjPnHlE A R T h 321 31 xini a P;AjwgTe A-l -t -laf -itIrIoItIhI I R a cold winter night. HEALTH ii comforting at any time. 17. A neglected DANGER of any sort would prove to be a se nous hazard on a larm. A ne glected MANGER might not be Hunter Safety Class Slated The Klamath tails Y.MCA is sponsoring Oregon Hunter Safety Classes to certify youngsters over 11 years of age for hunting li censes. Instruction, under the direction of Earl Sweet, OTI gunsmith de partment chairman, will begin at 7 p.m. Jan. 23 at the rifle range in the "Y" basement. Fees for the five-week courses are $2 for "Y" members and $2.50 for non-members. Klamath Falls youths can register at the YMCA anytime and they must pick up cards for their par ents to sign. ard. 19. A long-awaited TROTH or pledge of marriage should produce a great pleasure for the couple involved. A long-awaited TRUTH might come too late to save a man's life and produce no pleas ure whatever. EXPLANATIONS DOWN 1. The wrong STEER or tin in directions could throw a cow boy off his course. The wrong STEED or horse which he may have taken or borrowed by mistake could know the course very well. 2. The search for a definite TYKE or a specific child mieht postpone the production of a play. Many actors could fill the role of a definite TYPE and not neces sitate postponing a play. 3. A new HUB or knot on a tree could inspire a youngster to climb a tree he was unable to climb before. A new NIB or Den point would hardly be expected to inspire a youngster. 4. A YODEL or Swiss call would not seem foolish in natural surroundings. A YOKEL or coun- try bumpkin might sound fool-; Ish anywhere, depending upon what he said. 5. PRIDE goes before a fall PRICE might go up. 6. One would be surprised by an unexpected PARTY or gather. ing. one might not be sur-1 prised by an unexpected PARRY or evasion, as in dueling or speak ing, since this is often anticipated by an opponent. . A welder who did not take his WELDING seriously could have an unhappy future due to fi nancial loss. If he did not take his WEDDING ceremony as se riously as it should be taken, due to foolish libations, he could still have a happy future. 13. Most theater people follow a DIET to remain slim. -Many have no interest in a DUET. 15. A book publisher might w ish writer would EXIT promptly. if he were busv. He would not expect a writer to EDIT prompt ly, since he would have his on staff for this purpose. 16. Without any HAIR a man might be disconsolate, wishing it would grow. A man might not have any HEIR, having arranged it that way. 18. R.R. is an abbreviation for railroad. GUARANTEED REPAIR SERVICE AT WARDS Hi-fi phono, radio. TV. appliance . . . a Wards technician Is lusl a phone call awayl You'll like the service . . . and the price! Call today 1 MONTGOMERY WARD SERVICE DEPARTMENT TU 43IU h Pine One of the glaciers in Alaska is as big as Rhode Island. 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TU 4 5595 I ;; Bill M ft REMEMBER- For the convenience of those unable to take advantage of our specials during the weekend, all our grocery and vari ety prices will remain in effect through Wednesday, while stocks last! Shop Bfg-Y Monday Through Saturday For Cash Savings! Use First National Bank Money Orders, Up to 300.00 -20c Right Reserved To Limit Closed Sundays 4710 So. 6th NO MONEY DOWN AT WARDS m, mm, woois. L V'M9Uij Amazing low price for rugs this size! Wools, nylons or woolnylon U , Nir blends in textured, hi-lo, or looped pile. All 4 sides finishedl p L.t V;1 '"i A" nove bonded-on foom backs no pad needed I feifJ 12x15' CopriBlue Wool hi-lo loop pile 88 3 "'iyVV 12x15' Bitter green Woolnylon cut pile 88 fi l!fc,,hPl V'l '2x15' Thrush beige Nylon loop pile 88 k ifc-VJy 12x18' Red Wool loop pile 88 rJV 12x18' Chapel green Wool hi-lo loop pil 88 f 12x15' CPrib,ue Nylon cut pile 88 I ' 12x21' Coin ld Woolnylon loop pil 88 9th & Pine O Store Hours 9:30 to 5:30 Daily O Ph. 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