Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, February 17, 1963, Page 6, Image 6

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    PAGE A
HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls, Ore.
Sunday, February 17, 1963
Jacoby
On Bridge
NORTH 18
V85
QJ1098
QJIO
WEST EAST
AJ95 AQ1074
VJB2 VQ1073
4K72 453
K978 854
SOUTH (D)
AAK2
VAK6i
A64
A32
Both vulnerable
.Roulh. West North Esst
2N.T. Pass 3N.T. Fast
Pass Pass
Opening lead 6
if-
il i f m-OH-WKY-liK ' n mem
CHERIE MAE LEONARDO
aL
r.fi )
f - i j
Adoption Of Fag Tax Forecast For Oregon Legislature
LINDA HENRY
Too Late,
Too Little
By OSWALD JACOBY
Written for
Newspaper Enterprise Assn,
If you want to help your play
hv thinkinff. the time to do it
is before you make mistakes, not
afterwards when it is too Jatc.
Dummy's ten of clubs hel
the first trick. Then South led the
ouecn of diamonds from dummy
and after East played a small
diamond South began to think
How was he going to bring home
dummy's long diamond suit? Af
ter prolonged study South played
a low diamond. So did West, only
he didn't have to do much study
ing. West had noted that South
minht have been penny wise
pound foolish at trick one and
was going to block thai diamond
suit if he possibly could.
South continued with the jack
of diamonds, went into another
huddle and let Hie jack ride.
West took his king and led a dia
mond back.
South played on slowly, but
unsuccessfully. lie cashed his ace
and king of spades and West
dropped Ins jack. Then ho cashed
the ace and king of hearts and
West dropped that jack also.
Eventually, South wound up with
only eight lop tricks.
Had South only bothered to
think at trick one he would have
overtaken dummy's ten of clubs
with the ace. Then he would have
led the ace of diamonds and con
tinued the suit until West look
his king. West could have led any
thing but South would have a sure
cluli entry to dummy and would
have wound up with tour dia
monds lrtus two tricks in each'
other fiviil tor a tnUtt ot 10 in
stead of the eight he actually
made.
Is
Two More Beauties Vie
For Mardi Gras Crown
Chcric Mae Leonardo. 17, and
Linda Henry, 21, are two of the
eight Kingsley Field queen contest
ants who are hoping to wear the
408th Fighter Group crown at
(he Kingsley Mardi Gras Friday,
Feb. 22.
Mrs. Leonardo is representing
the 408th Dispensary and 322nd
Fighter Squadron, and Mrs. Hen
ry is one of the two Materiel
Squadron entries.
Mrs. Leonardo, with brown hair
and hazel eyes, is interested in
sewing and water activities. Her
husband, Stephen, is a personal
equipment specialist at the
:122nd Fighter Squadron. The Leo
nardos are from Redondo Beach.
Mrs. Henry, a Valentine Queen
runner-up in the 1962 Dallas, Tex..
USO beauty contest, is also inter
ested in sewing, as well as bowl-
UN Denies
Atrocities
ing. She has green eyes and au
burn hair and lives with her hus
band at 927 Lincoln Street m
Klamath Falls.
The mardi gras will be held
from 7 p.m. to midnight in the
maintenance hangar on base on
Feb. 22, with booths, dancing, and
fun in prospect for all. Tickets are
available at the squadron adminis
tration offices for military and ci
vilian workers at the air field.
CAPITOL MEMO
By ZAN STABK
By Lulled Press International
SALEM (UPI) Adoption of a
cigarette tax, a modified (405 mil
lion budget, and a compromise, of
present personal income tax plans
are quietly being torecast by leg
islators here. '
There is a growing feeling that
legislators may attempt to post
pone any major overhaul of the
state's income tax.
Off the - record comments by
some of the legislature's most in
fluential members indicate:
Gov. Mark Hatfield's budget
requests will be trimmed, but
other expenditures will result in
about a $405 million spending pro
gram. The Mosscr feature of retain
ing charity deductions, the Musa
plan for a $5 tax filing fee, and
the governor's $20 a person tax
credit in place of exemptions will
be combined in a partial overhaul
of present tax laws.
Sales tax proposals will be
sidetracks.
Many legislators say privately
they are getting a lot of pressure
from constituents urging "hold
the line." Education's requests
apparently do not have general
public support.
House Tax Committee Chair
man Richard Eymann, D-Marcola,
may have been outlining the leg
islature's course last Friday when
he discussed "alternatives."
Eymann suggested these "pos
sibilities":
Double beer and wine taxes to
raise $3 million a biennium.
-Adopt "one shot" withholding
and self-employed tax payment
peedups which could bring in up
to $18 million next biennium.
Tax small utility trailers for
an additional $4 million a biennium.
This produces up to $24 million
in new revenue.
A 4-cent a pack cigarette tax
would bring an an estimated $18
million a biennium.
This total of about $42 million
would more than be enough to fi
nance the alternate budget pro
posed by Legislative Fiscal Offi
cer Kenneth Bragg. It would fall
short of Hatfield's request, but
still provide enough for pay hikes
for state employes, and some ex
nansions of state services.
The cigarette tax has been de
feated before by the voters.
But voters know the state is in
financial trouble. They might ac
cept a cigarette tax. But it is
doubtful they would accept a cig
arette tax in addition to a major
increase in personal income taxes.
Both might be defeated, leaving
the state critically short of money,
and virtually assuring a special
session of the legislature would
have to be called late this year.
Eymann told tax committee
members use of the "alternative"
measures would give the legisla
ture an opportunity to study long
range tax increase needs during
the coming biennium, and elimi
nate the possibility of enacting
laws which would raise more
money than was needed.
Such a course would not solve
the money problem. It would sim
ply put off for another two years
any major overhaul of the income
tax.
During that two year period leg
islators could try to pluck the best
features from the many plans
now before it, and possibly come
up with a compromise tax plan
that the state could live with in
the years ahead.
It also would give voters an op
portunity to get used to the cig-1 themselves if they were willing tolso many groups claim are neecs-
arette tax, and determine forpay fur the "expanded services sary.
ALCOHOLIC CONTENT
The Volstead Act of 1919.
passed over the veto of President
Wilson, defined intoxicating liquor
as beverages containing 'i of 1
per cent alcohol by volume.
INCOME TAXES
See Your Reliable Income
TAX CONSULTANT
CHAS. HATHAWAY
Auditing - Bookkeeping
120 N. 10th TU 4-5473
Q The biddirujt has been:
West North Kent Month
1 4 Double Pass 3
Pass Pass 2 1
You, South, hold:
4854 VK76S 4KJ92 Mi
What do you do?
A Bid three diamond!. Ton
have enouch to warrant this sec
end bid.
TODAY'S QUESTION
You bid three diamonds. West
bids three spades and your part
ner doubles. What do you do
now?
Answer Monday
Three Seek
School Posts
DUNSMUIIl - Three mrmhrrs
of tlie PmiMmiir Elementary
Sclntol Hoard have announced
they are candidates for tlie April
16 school oltTlinn, and a fourth
inrumlient is not seeking re elec
tii in.
Jack Samuclson, vho has
served on tlie school board for
over i:i years slates he has en
joyen the evppncnrp hut it Is
time to step down. Mrs. Edmn
liney. .Nela Klurkin.in and tier
aid Snein-cr arc he present mem
hers whose names will apH?ar on
the April liallnt.
W. R. Kllinclon. forester fur I he
Ralph L. Smith division of Kim
berly Clark and father of t
children, has also announced Im
candidacy lor the school lto;ud
Of the five board positions. i,ll
but tlie isl held by Dr. II. A
. Meredith will come up this rice
' lion as a result of nx-cnt Iciiis
; lalivc rhaiiKcs
; At the school board meeting on
; Tuesday rvrninc. Hannah Hum-
; plireys. Alice Griffith and Mary
; McDonald were apointrd school
election officials.
Additional candidates for the
four school Imarrf posts must file
nomination p.iors uith the Siski
you County clerk by March I
UNITED NATIONS (UPD-The
United Nations Friday formally de
nied Roman Catholic Church au
thorities' charges tliat U.N. troops
committed atrocities and desc
aled churches in the Congo late
last year.
The denial was contained in a
cttcr from Robert K.A. Gardiner,
olliccr in charge of the U.N. op
erations in the Congo, to Mon-
scigneur E. Kileshie. vicar gen
eral of the ElisalwthviHe arch
bishopric.
Gardiner also referred to accu
sations made by Avchhishop Jo
seph Cornelia in Brussels.
The Catholic charges were:
That Irish troops fired point
blank at patients in a ward of
the Union Miniere Hospital of
Lubumbashi on Dec. 29.
That Ethiopian .soldiers killed
0 persons.
That several Catholic church
cs had been damaged, looted and
otherwise desecrated.
Gardiner said investigations
flowed there were no Irish troops
in the Lubumbashi area on Dec.
39. However, there were Ethiopian
troops, who were subjected tc
'lieavy" liring from inside the
hospital comHiund.
The Ethiopians, il was said, had
In enter the hospital area to clear
nut Katanga gendarmerie ixim
tinns. In the fighting, one patient
was wounded in the thigh and an
:lher was grazed. No tiring took
place inside tlie hospital ward and
lamagc was slight, the U.N. in
quiry showed.
Gardiner said no evidence ha
liccn produced to substantiate" the
charge thai Ethiopians killed 7n
liersons.
The investigation Indicated that
lliere were 4 corpses in the Lu
bumbashi Hospital and 2 in the
Prince 1-eupold Hospital all report
ed to lie victims of the fighting
Hut it was said to lie imxissible
to determine the source of the
hooting that killed them.
Gardiner said there was looting
of and damage to two churches
one in Kasaja and one in Kara
via. but that U.N. soldiers louncl
them in that condition when they
arrived.
TO PROVIDE HOSPITAL
THE HAGUE U PI' - The
Netherlands will provide a self
sustaining 50-lcd hospital unit lor
United Nations troops in the (on
co. the hutch Interior Ministry
announced Fndav.
HEAVY WEATHER OXMAGE
NASHVILLE. Tcnn. it'l'l' -The
Tennessee llidmny Department
, disclosed Friday that rain, ice
and snow have caused more than
St million in damage In tlie
Male's! roads so far this year.
Afk about doily
"Business Card"
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3800 So. 6th