Barneft Contempt Case Mulled By Eight Judges NEW ORLEANS l'P! - The 1. S. 5th Circuit Court of Appeals iturday studied the future of H'imiiial ronten.pt proceedings ocainsl Mississippi Gov. Ross Barnett and 1-t. Gov. Paul B. Johnson. ..Barnett and Johnson are (JJiarged with attempting to block Vgro James H. Meredith's en rollment at the University of Mis sissippi last fall. Hospital Happenings .Monday. Feb. II r- 12:00 Tulelake Organiza- tinnal Meeting at the Sports man'j Hotel. 7:00 p.m. Chemult and Gil--christ Organizational Meeting. 7:00 p.m. Business and Pro fessional Prospect Selection Meeting nf Teams captained by Al Nyback. Mai Gellup. iloe Victor, Leo Mnrstad, Jack Vaughn, C. F. Gansberg. D.V..M.. at St. Paul's Episcopal Church . 8:00 p.m. Board of Trustees Regular .Meeting, First Pres bytcrian Church. ' Tuesday, Feb. 12 7:00 p.m. Business and Pro fcssional Prospect Selection .Meeting of Teams captained by E. Willard Cedarleaf, Walt Ringham, Fred Foulon, Mar vin Heed and Bud White at St. Paul's Episcopal Church. 7:30 p.m. Special Gifts Meeting, Chamber of Csm inerce Office. Wednesday. Feb. 13 12:00 Memorial Gifts Divi sion Kick-Off. Molatore's Res tauranl. 7:00 p.m. Malin Organiza tional Meeting at Community Library. 7:30 p.m. Employe and Ex ecutive Meeting, Molatore's Restaurant. , ... y- ".i- m -s- . !- .." t' : .--; s:"- - . - - -,s-.-: . mM fan 'neu itxf i -?:3.ii'imJ. ..Aia.-: :.v. MISSING SHIP This is the 7.240 ton Marine Sulphur Queen which is missing on a run between Texas and Virginia. The ship is loaded wuh a 1 hor 1 cargo of molten sulphur and manned by a crew of 39. An "urgent" broadcast was flashed to surface ships to be on the lookout for the vessel, and a two-ocean search was launched. UPI Telephoto Sulphur Ship Missing In Atlantic. Gulf Area PORTSMOUTH. Va 'UP 1 1 -Airplanes and merchant ships Manned coaxal w, iters of tiie southern Atlantic and the Gulf Saturday for the missinc vessel Marine Sulphur Queen with .19 men aboard. The Coast Guard in New York s,nfl lour aircratt maintained Inep, srarcn tor ine (.li-to-ion tanner through the night, and that more planes would join the operation in the morning. ' The Coast Guard ordered its , de- districts at various ports to brief" tr.e masters of those es scls which may have crossed the path of the ship, which was car-. rmg hot cerco of molten sul hir. ,r ...rt.u-p ou-piu. v-.i .. rf rtUIII'Mtl, 1 1 a , ini Hiiumn i tiiMil far rrinlt Va uhf-rt it ' was scheduled to' arrive at noon 1 ThmsdAv u,.i ' i. r (r .!,:creimen lelt MJ-fool tanker, said it should have checked in by radio at noon'" Tuesday and al the same time on Wednesday. It never did. "Me now have an uraent bioad-ca.-t out to all merchants ships tn he on the !o"k"'it for the tank er." the l'oa-t Guard snid. T!w acruv was quesunninz the mas- SMALL APPLIANCE REPAIRS Veeuum Clttiurl Irani Mmrs Colt Mikn ToiHn Httn lltltnc fry Ftm WORK GUAIANTf 10 REX APPLIANCE REPAIR CENTER 12 I. M.i. TU 4 J)SJ Eight judges heard arguments on motions Friday by attorneys (or the two Mississippi officials and the Justice Department. No indication was given when the judges expect to take action on the motions. An attorney for Barnett and Johnson urged the appeals court to ignore all previous decisions in deciding whether they have a right to jury trial. The appeals court must decide whether to dismiss the charges; or when or where a trial can be held: or whether there should be a jury trial. Special assistant Mississip pi Ally. Gen. Charles Clark said the court should igrore all pre vious decisions even those of the U. S. Supreme Court in decid ing whether Barnett and Johnson should have a jury trial. He said the Constitution holds that a trial by jury is a defend ant's right in all crimes. "Yes, but what is a crime?" he asked. He said at the time the provision was put into the Consti tution contempt was not ennsid ered a crime. OSEA Offers j To Aid In Job Security Study SALEM lUPI) The Oregon State Employes Association i OSEA i offered to join Sen. An thony Yturri, R-Ontario, Friday in a study of civil service job se curity. Yturri Thursday told UPI he was asking the Ways and Means Committee to determine the dol lar value of job stability. The OSEA offer didn't indicate agreement with Ytuni's view. OSEA President Chalmers Jones said "Yturri's allegation that slate workers have tenure in their jobs is disproved by the very fact that lie and his fellow legislators are now deciding our fate." tcr.i of 21 vessels that should have crossed the missing ship's path as they hearted for Galves ton and other Texas ports thrnuch the Florida Straits. To identify those 21 vess-els, the Coast Guard in New York used huge computer with which it track of some son ships rtailv in the Atlantic between the Equator and the North Pole. Tlie ship, skippered by J. V. Fanning, carried sulphur that is kept in a molten state bv steam ...... ...... , ,. . mi.: wmii i iiiriiuiriin uiuiv inn peialures of 2A. deuiecs. It op- nTilr tho Marino Tinn.iV.ll ' . .. . , ' , phur was in hea'ily insulated steel tanks and less dangerous to talTy thil Rasolin.. ai ry than gasoline. Fanning, of Beaumont, is mar la'hfr '" ;aced children. Virtually all the ,aceo cnuuien. wnuaiiy a,i (amihes in I he Beaumont - Galveston - Houston DENTAL PLATES Repaired, etc. Our convenient, h o n d y, practical, and economical tervi'ct NOW available. No appointment rded. mrr n Itini lur I rIH "matt fer OPEN 00 - 5 00 10J3 Mom St. TU 4.J2I4 HERALD AM) NEWS. Klamath 1vv Amtlil.-alli'lf(tii-J ifiMtt! Ifil ihW. i-oi NEGRO SEEKS ORDER asked the U. S. Fifth Circuit University of Mississippi to has set the morning of Feb. Highway Office Stalls CorvaUiS'Nevfport Link SALEM (UPI i Legislators in terested in highway 20 develop mentcaught between demanding constituents and available money didn't get much encouragement from the Highway Department Friday. The lawmakers met with High way Engineer Forrest Cooper and Highway Commission Chairman Glenn L. Jackson to find out what work is scheduled on highway 20 from Corvallis to New port. Cooper said it would cost $17 million to rebuild the highway. He said the highway department did not have the money to do the job. A bridge at Corvallis, a $1.2 million improvement east of New port, and other smaller jobs are slated in the immediate future, he explained. He said the department has a program to "clear up the worst Famed House To Be Closed SALEM i;PI - The historic Jason Lee House one of the first buildincs in Salem will be open to the public Irnm 2 tn 5 p m. Sunday, then will be closed to the public. The structure will either be de stroyed or moved within the next Iwo weeks. It was built in 1MO-4I under the direction o( Jason Lee who was head of the Willamette Methodist Mission. The properly on which the build ing rests has been sold to a pri vate development company. The Marion County Historical Society is hoping tn relocate the building which has been olfered to the city of Salem. It was in the Jason Lee building that Marion County gnvernmen' was organized. Willamette Univer sity was founded, the territorial government was established, and Hie Knights of the Golden Circle, a group of Southern smpalhi7.crs, lormed their society. When It's Your MOVE CALL TU 4-7425 PEOPLES WAREHOUSE "SINCE . . . Ui-il mt nf 4tlMr ma. Of Ri BfiHfe trrt HO) STORAGE . . . CRATING Falls, Ore. Sunday, February 10, 1963 I ' J I n in Yr " - Dewey Greene, right, and hit attorney, William Kunstler, Court of Appeals in New Orleans last Friday to order the enroll Greene as a student. Chief Judge William Tuttle 16 for a hearing on the motion. U PI Telephoto areas" over the next six years as money becomes available. He quickly added this would not be the $17 million rebuilding job. The highway department spokes. man said there was $28 million bonding authority left, but to use it "would start a wild scramble for the money." Jackson said the department was opposed to bonds, and said interest paid on highway bonds did not build roadways. Cooper agreed to start an im mediate study to see what im provemenls would have to be made to end truck restrictions on the route. He said lie hoped he could report back to the group in about two weeks. Rep. Edward Riddcrbusch. D- Tillamook, asked if the depart ment was seeking higher gas tax and license fees to raise more money for highways. Jackson said "we are not lobby ing for more money, that's up to the legislature to decide." ' Sen. Glenn Huston, D-Lebanon, referring to the $7 million high way bond bill introduced in the House, said "if we go ahead with this, bonding, Multnomah County will jump in with a $40 million bond program. I'm afraid we'd better soft pedal this thing." Cold Numbs Northeast A dcad-of-w inter cold wave plunged temperatures deep below the zero mark across the nation's Northeast Saturday. February cold uicludcn 22 be low at Alpena. Mich., 20 below at Burlington, VI., and S below at Phillipsburg, Pa. The freezing air probed into the northern Gulf States and moved westward to Oklahoma and tne northern Rockies. Temperatures were mild in the West, but a sluggish storm laid a light coating of snow over parts of Nebraska. The cold eased somewhat in New York City, where 2 below made it the coldest day of the year Friday. Other eastern lows today included IS below at Polls ton. Mich , and lnanon. N.H. Freezing weather extended southward from southern North Carolina tn eastern Tennessee, crossing Alabama and Mississippi to Nebraska. A storm, packed with up to three inches of fresh snow, moved out of Nebraska across Missouri into the Southeast. Freezing driz zle was expected to accompany the snow eastward. It spread a 2-inch blanket of snow in north eastern Nebraska ana lower South Dakota. Florida. Texas and the Pacific coastal statrs had mild readings in the 50s. Mt. Washington in New Hamp shire had a 33-he!ow-zero reading Friday. Wanakena. N.Y., reported an unofficial 2fl below and Owl's Head, N Y., 27 below. A trip from Columhus to Sand usky, both in Ohio, required (wo days hy stage coach in 1R.15-1RM, according to .schedules. 1918" FREE ESTIMATES . PACKING PACE J A 1111 i V ' J) -j -jr..- f if lev. A . T v lf ' f l - . u u$xrs:t S S I '' ,fi;i-jiffl., Spanish Base Negotiations Postponed MADRID (UPD The Spanish government announced Saturday thai U.S. Deputy Defense Secre tary Roswcll Gilpatric, who was to have come here next week to dis cuss renewal of U. S. bases in Spain, lias "postponed" his trip. A government spokesman said the "postponement" was agreed to by the Spanish and American gov ernmenls to give both sides more time to prepare a draft for the negotiations. No new date has been set for Gilpatric's visit to Spain. Earler Spanish Information Minister Manuel Fraga Iri- barne told newsmen' that "no agenda" for the talks had been set. Fraga said an official agenda would follow "preliminary talks." lnfnrmed sources'said the Amer ican Embassy here and Spanish diplomats in Washington strongly advised against Gilpatric's visit at this moments since the Spanish government seems not to have mads up its mind what it will ask for in exchange for renewal of the defense treaties. Authoritative sources said the Spanish were keeping their price secret for the renewal of the agreements. Official circles termed as "hase- less" some speculation aboard that Spain would ask for up to $.100 million in economic aid from the United Stales. One Spanish of- flcial source said, "it is too soon" to know how much Spain will ask lor. There also was speculation that sensitive Spaniards were hurt by the fart that Gilpatric is retiring in June and he accordingly will have nothing to do with the new agreements, expected to be signed in September. Boivin Named Bank Officer Harry D. Boivin has been liamed a vice president nf the Bank of Klamath Falls, it was announced by Bob Most, presi dent. Boivin, who is alsi, a director of the hank, was named an offi cer at a meeting of the board of directors here Friday. Immediate Cash Scarce & Common Coins 'Siiy Wfl art in town lor three dayi only Men.. Tuffi. aecf Wed., fb. 11, 12 and 13 and art paying tha following prictl tor tho coins wo nood. Foroign coins olio wonted b ,o ii, copper, liKcr ond fold. Indian Head Cents HIM 00 11S9 30c ' ' 00 1861 S17S J0t 1S.4 30, ' ! 00 1847-U70 $2.00oo. lU-D,... $11.30 1171.1172 $4.00 oo. 113-$ $1.00 1177 $23.00 1922-D 60c ' 00 1923$ 33c ,MW " " 1924-D $2 00 1909.$ $22.30 1931-$ $12 30 All ofhtrt, $11.00 per 100 1931-D 30e Lincoln Pennies 19J3-D 40c 1903-$ $7.30 1909- 3VDI $33.00 nii win par loo no r.- a minolrl l.lntnlr f.anl 1910- $ . $1.00 llrrllii all Oalaa an mint. trior ar -olm 10 Jim Tankrrala or rrorvtmla. tla al Mnlalora a MOIrl, Rfli 101, rhaor 11' 1.44 10 a a m li II in Iro partaol ralna oiorl ka 10 nlra rooCMIoo. Reluctant Volunteers Plan Hike For Health WASHINGTON' IUPH - T h el wnite House was amassing a val-ipion, Supreme Court Justice Wil iant but largely reluctant band ofjjjam o. Dou"las volunteers Saturday for the most improbable marching plan since Hannibal crossed the Alps. At press secretary Pierre Salin ger's unsolicited instigation, and with Salinger in the lead, a por tion of President Kennedy's otfi cial family will go hiking at 7 a.m. EST next Friday with a group of apprehensive newsmen. The idea is to prove that physi cal fitness is good for you. Con sidering that the venture momen tarily replaced Cuba as "topic A" on the New Frontier, it won't be an ordinary hike. According to current plans, the marchers will assemble in the Georgetown section of Washington in the cold grey light of morning and then trudge up the Chesa peake & Ohio Canal, which paral lels the Potomac River. They will use the tow-path, which was re served for barge-hauling mules a century ago. Offers Reassurance How much of the towpath's 101 miles the hikers will cover or whether they even will reach the Maryland line about six miles .-ilnni' the wav um imknmm al llltte nninl Cilin-inr uli-. nn,.L-G 185 pounds into his portly 5-foot, 9-inch frame, offered some reas surance when asked how far he planned to go: Until I give out. I have a leeling we won't go loo far." Marching along with Salinger will be Kennedy's three military aides Army Maj. Gen. Chester V. Clifton, Navy Capt. Tazewell T. Shepard Jr., raid Air Force Brig. Gen. Godfrey T. McHugh. They will try to put the civilians, particularly Salinger, to shame in any test of endurance. This is because the whole idea started when Kennedy told Gen. David M. Shoup, Marine Corps commandant, to implement an or der Theodore Roosevelt issued as president in 1908, requiring Ma rine officers periodically to hike 50 miles within three days tn test their mettle. Several groups of Marines and civilians have tried it in the last week, and 20 Marine officers are planning to do so al Camp Le-j jeune, N.C., next Tuesday. Calls For Volunteers : Salinger called for volunteers' from the White House news corps. There was a speedy response from several dozen reporters and cameramen who were not nec essarily nature lovers hut knew there was no other way to cover the Salinger hike. . The administration's contingent grew. Interior Secretary Stewart Udall was added a ringer, of sorts, since he is a hiker of re known and has trod the canal Strike Ends At Coos Bay COOS BAY I UPI' An agree ment was announced Saturday by Stale Conciliator Paul I inning ending a strike of electrical work ers in this area. Tinning said an agreement was igned Thursday night for a new two year contract between the Coos Area Electrical Contractors Association and local fl.12 of the Intel-national Brotherhood of Elec trical Workers. No deUiils were announced. Tlie union had gone on ktrikc Jan. 2!). saying it wanted tn bring its scale up to what was paid other areas in the slate. About fiO men were allpclod. Exttnd your ptrional good wiahef to sick fritnda with chcorful frtih flowtr or rongtmtnt from NybockV f la war Fair. route with its most devoted cham - Adm. George Burklcy. assistant White House physician, will go MARKET BASKET Del Monte Chunk Sl-yle W , A TUNA Locally Made Crater Lake COTTAGE CHEESE Pint Tub Bag Icy PEARS WOW! Big No. 2'i tins 3;45' PANCAKE FLOUR '49 Sperry 4-lb. bag Del Monte PINEAPPLE JUICE M'1 US1 trarcges Potatoes Swift Premium All Canned Ham Steaks Ground Beef USDA CHOICE LOCKER DCCC m Cut, wrapped and u,eM- froien fieo. I-Z terms. No )f I money down, No payment VJ$ (ill April I Holf Beef 49 Hind Quarte 57" along - but by automobile. Salin- ger explained: "We wouldn't want to let anything happen to him, if he should be needed to take care of anyone else." I .As "" STARTS TODAY! SHOP HERE! Market Basket is your CCA Super Market! Get points every time you shop! And you get extra points when you shop the first of the week! ALL PURCHASES SUNDAY, MONDAY, TUESDAY and WED NESDAY COUNT 10 TIMES THEIR REG ULAR VALUE! KICK-OFF BONUS day, 7 - v3 ro,9er m Coffee S 2-Lb. Tin 97c I 4L, Folger's INSTANT I Mi Lorge or Juice Size Sweet & Juicy Your Choice Klamath U.S. No. 2 Red Bliss Meat, No Waste Picnics Generous Slices eo. .OS In the vanguard will be a "iji rine Corps private "a volunteei' as Salinger laughingly put it whom Shepard will assign to set the pace" for the marchers. 1,000 POINTS N a thin a to buy! Gar 1,000 Bon us pointi lust for ragistaring Sun Monday, Tuesday or Wed- K- neidoy thii week. Have your friends register, too! I Mix or Mahh I I Dol Monro I ! Fruit Cocktail Sliced or Vi Peaches Grapefruit Early Garden Peas Solid Pak Tomatoes All Dol Monro 303 Tim Mix or Mofch 5i$1 " $1 198 49' Lean So. 6th & Shasta Way OPEN TODAY 10:00 to 7:00 Open 'Til Midnight Weekdays