DATELINE SALEM By Bob Bruce Capital News Bureau .PAGE 10-B HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls, Ore. Wednesday, February 13, 1962 By BOB BRUCE Capital News Bureau SALEM (Special) Sen. Walter Pearson of Portland introduced a bill that would create a legisla tive watchdog committee to keep an eye on the rules and regulations established by the many depart ments, agencies and commissions. The committee would be empow ered lo suspend any regulation that it felt was contrary to t h e intent of tlie legislature. The leg islature would then review the matter In its next session. Both Speaker of the House Clarence Barton and Senate President Ben Musa voiced approval of the idea and both specifically pointed to the Department of Education as an example of a department that was "growing too big and too power-! ful." There Is considerably more here than meets the eye, for it brings into the open the fact that Jaw- makers realize that they have, in some cases, been circumvented, after they closed up shop and went home. It also serves notice that they are not going lo stand for such practices. Many board and commission decisions result in rules that have the effect of law, but were never reviewed by the lawmakers. A legislative uprising may be in the making that could be far- reaching, for once again, several bills have been Introduced to build highways with a bonding program that, in effect, circumvents the Highway Department that does. business on so-called dedicated or ear-marked funds like gas taxes. Since the Highway Department has been concentrating on Inter state Freeway systems because of the 92 per cent of cost paid by the federal government, other areas of the state not on these freeways, have become known as the "have-i lints." Speaker Barton slates it thusly, "The legislature represents the people, and if the people do not1 get what they want and need from the Highway Department, they naturally look to the legislature for It. Governor Hatfield has op posed such bonding for highways because of interest cost. However, this is just another sign that law makers resent rubber-stamping the highway commission budget when the folks back home can't pot needed highway improvements." Sen. Alfred Corbclt of Portland w as not one of the many senators and representatives who signed Senator Pearson's watchdog com mittee legislation. He feels, rath er strongly, that the creation of such a committee might well be putting the legislature in an area where it ought not to be. He points! out that it is the legislature's job to make the laws and the judici ary department's province to de fine them. Gov. Mark Hatfield hastens to point out that legislative concern jover the rule making authority of these boards and commissions is eloquent testimony of the need for reorganization whereby the auton omous agencies would be respon sible to the chief executive. The last session of t h e legislature turned down such a proposal. The proposed new constitution, how ever, calls for just such a strong executive branch of government, which seems to indicate that some of the 17-member commission who drew up the new constitution! agree with the governor in that respect. Senator Pearson's bill has an ex cellent chance of becoming law. It may be that it is not consti tutional but whatever the outcome, the legislature has served notice on tile many boards, departments and commissions that they do not intend to sit idly by and see abuses of the power they have granted. ii, ra imttn urn- nl-nnnmim film mi i nirri-ni-mmn trwiik in iiiifiiriiiiiw'f iiirriliniir rUMiifnJ Henley Starts Decision Stud Approximately 70 Henley High School juniors and seniors are par ticipating in student Great Deci sions study groups. The Great Decisions program, held annually all ovet the country in February and March, was in troduced to Henley this year for the first time by litchard Pas tega, American history and Amer ican problems teacher. The idea of having student groups as well as adult groups is the first of its kind in the county, and the stu denls have shown surprising in terest in it. Tlie Henley students, in five groups, will meet once a week for eight weeks, taking a diffcrcn: discussion topic each lime. RUNAWAYS TOP RECORD These three runaway boys took President Kennedy's physical fitness program too seriously. They walked 82 miles -from their homes in The -Dalles to Portland. After arriving, the trio, left to right, John Dethman, 15, Alex Bachellor, 16, and Gene D. Emett, 15, stowed away on a ship that was bound for the Orient. The three left The Dalles Sunday and were discovered aboard the vessel at 2:30 a.m. Tuesday. UPI Telephoto Kennedy's Ailing Back Still Ails Despite Focus On 50 Mile Hikes Ned Olallie Ridge Natural Area Established Establishment of a new Natural Area on the Willamette National Forest has been approved by the chief of the U.S. Forest Service. The 720-acre area has been named the Olallie Ridge Natural Area. It brings to 18 the number of such areas in the Pacific North west region since their selection began in 1931. It was established in line with recommendations made by J. Herbert Stone, region al forester, and Robert W. Cow- lin, director of the Pacific North west Forest and Range Experi ment Station. Natural areas are established with the aim to represent all im portant forest and range types that occur on the national forests. They are managed in an undisturbed, virgin condition for scientific ob servation and research on forest and plant succession, biolic associ ations, and other related natural phenomena. This particular area was set aside to represent the Pa cific silver fir-mountain hemlock forest association, a major forest type on the upper slopes of the Cascade range. Olallie Ridge lies south of the McKenzie Highway about 50 miles east of Eugene. The natural area is m two par- eels and includes the summits of Horsepasture and O'Leary moun tains. The natural area is in the same vicinity as five special recreation areas established recently by the 1 o r e s t service. Those special areas, totalling 1.96C acres, are the Lamb Butte and Yankee Moun tain Scenic Areas, the Lowder Mountain and Rebel Rock Geolog ical Areas, and the Quaking Aspen Swamp Botanical Area. The geology of the Olallie flidge Natural Area is representative of the Eocene and Miocene ages and is typical of the old or western Cascades. The geologic structure is apparent on the south side of O'Leary Mountain. faylor Castle and Lamb Butte, about one mile south of Horsepasture Mountain, are composed of the younger vol canic rocks of the Pleistocene age similar to the high Cascades to the east of the area. The proximity of the two geological periods is of particular significance in geologi cal study. Timber types, vary from Doug las fir with white fir understory at the lower elevat'ons through true firs and mountain hemlock and. ultimately, to small areas of subajpine species on the mountain tops. Main species of conifers are mountain hemlock, Pacific silver fir, and alpine fir. Upper elevations are character ized by open areas with shallow soil. South slopes in these open ings are of interest to botanists because they support flora which normally exists only in drier cli mates. Establishment of the area re duces by one-tenth of one per cent the annual allowable harvest of timber in the McKenzie Working Circle of the Willamette Nation al Forest. ONE MORE TO GO CAMDEN, Maine (UPI) -Os car Grinncll, 55, went water ski ing Sunday in Camden Harbor wearing a thermal rescue .suit and a life preserver even though the temperature was 32 degrees. Grinnell needs only next month's trip to complete his goal of skiing in each of 12 consecu tive months in Maine waters. WASHINGTON (UPI Thei Almost everywhere he goc: White House accent on vigor has from the after deck of the yacht been so focused recently on 60- Honey Fitz lo the glittering ban mile hikes that the public virtual ,,iuct dais of the Waldorf Astoria ly has lost sight of a continuing Hotel in New York the Presi Given Exam Mc-MINNVIIXE (IIPII - Ac cused slayer Larry Richard Wai hcl, 17, has been returned to the Yamhill County jail here after undergoing 45 days ol psychiatric examination at the Oregon Slate Hospital at Salem. Waibcl is charged with first dc grce murder in tlie fatal shooting of Mrs. Mae Pinnell, f9, Carlton, at her home last Dec. 13. He is scheduled to appear in Circuit Court at McMinnville next Mnn- day. I problem, President Kennedy's ail ing back. His back had gone without ma jor public notice for some months until his sistcr-in-Iaw, Mrs. Ed ward M. Kennedy, raised the sub ject in the current issue of Look magazine, "His back is a problem," said the wife of the President's youn, er brother and new senator from Massachusetts. "He can barely pick up his own son. This was a reference to John .Jr., the 2-ycar-old, 35-pound son of the Chief Executive and his wife, Jacqueline. According to While House Press Secretary Pierre Salinger, "The President's back is improving, but his son is getting heavier." To document this recurrently stated improvement in the Chief Executive's chronic back condi tion is well nigh impossible. The chief White House physician, Dr. Janet Travcll, is a recluse as far as reporters are concerned dent is accompanied by a spe c-ially constructed, black leather chair which gives the lower por tion of his back extra support. This chair approximates the support and comfort of the .straight-backed rockers placed in almost every room which he fre quents. Anotiicr piece of constantly present equipment when he trav els is a specially constructed horsehair mattress. He has sev eral and seldom, if ever, bleeps on anything else. When he Ls moving about or getting up and down out of chairs frequently, the President, as do thousands of sufferers from the same chronic weakness of certain muscular and skeletal areas of the back, wears a small corset or girdle. The more acute phases of his hack trouble date back to a fiint- For Valentino's Day BEAUTIFUL AGATE JEWELRY Gay's Gift Shop 219 Mom St. sHitt-drlkioiif,: 1.IIAUT RECIPES Dept. K ball injury received during his freshman year at Harvard. Ac tually, the condition was noticed earlier when he complained of back trouble at summer camp prior to college days. His back was injured again in the famous PT-boat incident dur ing World War II. Dangerous and painful surgery was necessary during the 1950s. The attraction of gravity causes things to have weight. DELIGHT P.O. Box 2589, Portland 3, Ore. a Flavor's Right! I Wo money down on credit at Wards- 1 Week Only ...February 13th to 20h j , W ill i tMrWmmtmmimkmkmmtmjjll'n' , " j " 'ttIBi 1 ' . Mod.i 432 --iSsSX'; " L-'SSS5! TR U C O LD j l i I ni muMf Mtmam mm with FOOD and MEAT Your Choice UPRIGHT or CHEST TYPE FREEZER plus FOOD and FWfWWM NO MONEY DOWN HERE'S WHAT YOU GET MEAT (S) 36 Months To Pay On Terms 10 lb. T-Bono Steaks 10 lb. Rib Steaks 10-lb. Round Steaks 10-lb. Chuck Steaks 10-lb, Ground Beef 4-lb. Chuck Roast 4-lb. Rump Roast 3 only l ib. Cornish Hem 1 only 20-lb. Turkey 3- lb. Pork Roost 4- lb. Center Cut Park Chops 2 only Frying Chickens 2 lb. Sliced Bacon 2 pkgs. 12-os. Wieners 4 pkgs. Banquet Macaroni and Cheese 2 only l ib. pkgs. of Filet of Sola 2 only 1 lb. Pkgi. Booth Breaded Shrimp 4 only pkgs. Flov-R-Pac Cut Gr. Beam 5 only pkgs. Flov-R-Poc Cut Corn 5 only pkgs. Flov-R-Pac Pcoi 5 only pkgs. Flov-R-Poc Fr. Fries 9-ox. S only pkgs, Flov-R-Poc Chopped Spinach 5 only pkgs. Flav-R-Pac Mixed Vcge. 4 only pkgi. Supermarket Strawberries 4 only pkgs. Flav-R Poc Broccoli Spears 4 tins 12-os. Orange Juice, Surcfrcsh 4 tins 12-oi. Lemonade, Flov-R-Pae 4 tins 12-os. Flav-R-Pac Grape Juice 4 only Banquet 8" Fruit Pies 12 pkgi. Banquet 8-ot. Meat Pies 4 pkgi. Banquet TV Dinners 4 pkgs. Banquet Mcsican Dinners 5 Only ' i gal. Crater Lake Ice Cream Food and Meat Packaged by Market Basket ff 9th & PINE STORE HOURS 9:30 TO 5:30 PHONE TU 4-3183 fi Malta C&E Market - f 7i flr nn w iTiiiifjfr Our 2nd Anniversary Event Was A Huge Success! Thanks Friends . . . Our special thanks go out to all our customers for making our 2nd Anni versary Celebration and sale such a huge success! We renew our pledge to continue to serve you with the fin est foods at lowest prices. CY AND EVELYN Prize Winners were: Electric Fry Pan Mr. and Mrs. John O'Sullivan, Newell Food Mixer Isabella Brown, Tulelake Stuffed Teddy Bear Donna Rick, Malin Stuffed Crab LaRoyce Hodge, Malin Stuffed Sea Horse Ton! Kessler, Malin Best Foods Real Crater Lake - Days Fresher Cottage Cheese ROYAL Big Family Size Pkgs. PUDDINGS 3s29 HAWAIIAN PUNCH Ret! er Goldtn 46-oi. tint The Good Kind! PURETA WIENERS Sausage '"l Frvers Swiff Premium' Cut Up tb. - j USDA Good, All Cuts Jjf (. 39c $1 29 I '"' 2,l,.79c I 39c BRILLO SOAP PADS 2-49c Chuck Roast Bologna Swift Prcmium Lor9e Ground Beef F,esh' Leon 3 lbs. USDA GRADE GOOD LOCKER BEEF Cut and Wrapped Free Whole or ha Tf 49- Hind Qrfr. 58 Del Monte Pineopple JUICE 4 r Waffle Syrup 49c Staley's - full quart Reg. 59e - NOW Salvo Tablets 59c J;t 198 giant sixe Baker's Cocoanut 59c Angel Flake 14-ox. pkg. POPCORN Jolly Time 2-lb. pkgs. 2 o, 49c J TOMATOES Large Fancy Slicers New Spring Blooms Daffodils Peppers 1 v,ri"" Rhubarb " Grapefruit Whi"' Macaroni-Spaghetti3 Malin C.A.'s Cake & Food Sale At C&E Market Saturday 10:00 A.M. Pizza Pie Mix 39c Appian Way with cheese Reg. pkg. dot. 39 - 29 c 18?98c Porter's 24-oz. pkg. Your Choice Afl Downtown Malin, Oregon Pricei Effective Thurs. AflARKET thru Sot. Right Reserved to Limit