Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, March 11, 1963, Page 3, Image 3

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    , Jacoby
On Bridge
NORTH n
AKJ97
K5
AQ108
4b 96
EAST (D)
A3
AQ102
K53
KJ1075
WEST
A 5 4 2
J763
642
Q84
SOUTH
AAQ1088
V84
J97
A32
East and West vulnerable
Et Soutb Wt North
U Pass 3 A
4 A Pass Pass
Pass
Opening lead 4
Cagey Play
Makes Bid
By OSWALD JACOBY
Written for
Newspaper Enterprise Assn.
It is standard practice in expert
circles to play the jump .raise
' "nf an overcall as strong, but not
forcing. Thus, I was under no
obligation to go to four spades
after my partner jumped to three,
but I hate to stop one trick below
game so I pulled myself togeth
er, worked out my alibi in case
the game did not make, and bid it.
West opened the four of clubs.
East rose with the king and I
had to make an immediate deci-
sion. if that four of clubs was a
singleton it would be up to me to
Rrab the trick, draw trumps, and
take the diamond finesse. If it
worked I would make an over-
' trick, if it failed I would still
" make my contract.
Suppose that the lead had been
third or fourth best. Then if I
took the first club and the dia
mond finesse lost. East would be
able to put his partner in to lead
through dummy's king of hearts.
I couldn't afford that. East need
ed both the ace of hearts and
king of diamonds for his opening
, bid, therefore my problem was
to decide if the lead were a single-
, ton or not.
There was no sure thing, but it
seemed unlikely to find a seven
one split in clubs. I let the king
v:jKld the trick.
From then on everything was
hunky-dory. I won the club re
turn; drew trumps, finessed the
...diamond unsuccessfully, but was
? able to discard a heart on dum
my's fourth diamond to make my
: contract.
5 11
Q The bidding has been:
West North East Sooth
; 1 Double 2 4 ?
; You, Soafh, hold:
A876S VK43 4A J9 842
What do you do?
t A Bid two spades. Yon have
eight points and should bid.
' TODAY'S QUESTION
Your partner raises to three
' tpades. What do you do?
- Answer Tomorrow
Scots Guard
IQuits Post
LONDON (UPP-Fed up with
loo much spit and polish disci
pline, 25 members of the elite
'r; Scots Guards one of the regi-.-ments
which looks after the queen
f. walked o(f in a huff Friday.
n It was a strike to raise the
; eyebrows of every lover of royal
tradition and to make uncounted
?thousands o legendary Col.
r.Blimps turn in their graves.
Britons took it with a mixture
of astonishment, indignation and
ijsome carefully controlled mirth.
The men went AWOL shortly
J; before some of them were due to
osland guard at Windsor Castle,
'where the changing of the guard
provides Britons and tourists with
,one of this old country's most
famous sights.
2 Fourteen of the guards were
'rounded up Saturday after a Lon-!don-wide
search. Then others bc
gan trickling in.
!i One of the returnees. 18-year-
;old Hugh Smith, .told reporters.
"We will repeat all our com
;"plaints when asked. This walkout
had been brewing for a long
;time. We were just fed up with
it poor grub and w ith all the heck
;ling. The CSM (company ser
geant major' has been too tough.
?Soldiers won't stand or that sort
'!of thing."
i SANITONE
I WATER REPELLENT
'(n REALLY WORKS!
i Water rolls right off . . . fabrics
( stay soft as new when treated
with new miracle Soft-n-Dry. Try it!
CASCADE
Laundry It
Clconen
Opp. Poit Otfict
Ph. 4-5111 or
2-2531
BROADWAY
CLEANERS
461 S So. 6th
Ph. 4-6403
Mansfield
Sees Danger
From Syria
WASHINGTON iL'PH - Sen
ate Democratic leader Mike
Mansfield said Saturday the lat
est Syrian political upheaval only
underscores a need for a con
structive, non partisan approach
to Cuba and other U.S. foreign
policy problems.
The Montana Democrat told a
reporter the Middle East situa
tion, including the takeover in
Syria by pro-Nasser forces, has
"all the elements of combustion
that could flame into a world
conflagration."
He said there also are such
other trouble areas as Berlin
South Viet Nam, Formosa, Ko
rea, and Africa besides the Cu
ban crisis, to burden President
Kennedy.
The President, he said, "has
an awful lot on his mind. We
must find some suitable meeting
point where we can subordinate
politics and political motives and
look to the common good.
In another development, presi
dential press secretary Pierre Sa
linger told newsmen the White
House is not getting into daily
arguments with Republicans who
are criticizing the administration
about Cuba.
He was asked for comment on
a pledge by House Republican
whip Leslie C. Arends, 111., to
keep hitting at the issue.
"Our position is very clear,"
Salinger said. "We're not going
to get into these daily argu
ments." Mansfield went on the Senate
floor Friday to lash at Kennedy's
Republican critics on Cuba. He
accused them of "panic politics"
and of "prowling over the dead"
with the rehashing of the ill
fated Bay of Pigs invasion.
In his sternly-worded attack,
he said the Republicans who
tried to make it appear that the
Kennedy administration had tried
to suppress news that four Ala
bama fliers had died in the in
vasion were guilty of "irrespons
ible politics."
He termed raking over of the
incident a "cruel thing to do" to
the fliers' families and a "reck
less thing to do to foreign poli
cy." He said "no national pur
pose" was served by partisan
discussion of the Cuban crisis.
Although some of his remarks
appeared to be aimed at Senate
GOP leader Everett M. Dirksen
Mansfield Saturday exonerated
the Illinois Republican of irres
ponsibility. Cuba Fence
Proposed
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Sen.
Clair Encle. D-Calif., Saturday
recommended a full armed block
ade of Cuba if other efforts to
Set Soviet troops out of the island
do not work.
An actual invasion, he said,
should be "the last recourse" and
should be considered only in light
o soviet threats of nuclear at
tack. Engle, in an interview filmed
for broadcast over California sta
tions, said diplomatic efforts
should be made first to force the
troop removal. If that proves un
successful, he added, the nations
oi the Western Hemisphere should
Join in a boycott of Cuba.
"If that doesn't work. . . then we
put on a blockade a full block
adein which case we throw an
armed corridor around Cuba and
make the operation so expensive
that Mr. Khrushchev would rath
er give it up than pay the price,"
tngle said.
An invasion, he said, would re
quire the use of many American
divisions and result in loss of
American lives.
"And. finally." he said, "we
can't ignore the threat made by
the chief of defense of Russia that
if we invade Cuba they will
launch a nuclear attack acainst
the United States."
"I'm not saying that we ought
to be bluffed out by what Mr.
Khrushchev or his defense chief
say, but I am saying that wc
have to consider all that."
Engle said the final decision on
invasion should be left to the
President.
Buenos Aires. Argentina, is sec
ond only to New York City in the
extent of its foreign trade.
NEW
METHOD
CLEANERS
1451 E.plon.d.
Ph. 4-4471
MONDAY
CDA NO. 1295. 8 p.m.. meet
ing. Sacred Heart parish hall.
Biing layette items for setting.
EW.UNA TOAST.M1STRESS,
7:30 p.m.. meeting. Winema Ho
tel. Visitors welcome.
KLAMATH SPORTSMEN'S AS-
SOCUTIO.V. 8:30 p.m., Shasta
Grange Hall. Public invited.
KLAMATH KNIFE & FORK
CLl'B, 6:45 p.m., dinner, Winema
Hotel. Madame Suzanne Silver-
cruys, sculptress.
TILELAKE HIGH SCHOOL
PARENTS' GROUP, 7:30 p.m..
meeting, high school.
El'LALONA CHAPTER, DAR,
8 p.m., meeting. First Presbyter
ian Church. Speaker, William
Sweetland.
DEGREE OF HONOR, 7:30
p.m., meeting, KC Hall.
CHILOQL'IN PTA, 5:30 to 7:30
p.m., chiliburger dinner, grade
school cafeteria.
ALL KLAMATH COUNTY
GRANGERS, 8 p.m., visitation,
Merrill Grange Hall. Program,
Shasta View Grange. Potluck des
sert. TUESDAY
ROOSEVELT SCHOOL PTA,
2:30 p.m., meeting and faculty
tea. Child care provided in gym.
JOLLY NEIGHBORS, 8 p.m.,
St. Patrick's party, Mrs. Harry
Wiard, 2705 Wiard. Wear green.
CHIEF SCHONCHIN CEME
TERY ASSOC., 2 p.m., meeting,
Friends Church, Sprague River.
Public invited.
ALOHA CHAPTER 61, OES. 8
Arizona Boundary Pacf
To Be Signed Tuesday
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (UPI) -
An agreement redefining the
boundary line between California
and Arizona which climaxes 10
years of negotiations will be
signed by Boundary Commissions
of both states in a ceremony
Tuesday in Gov. Edmund G
Brown's office.
The boundary actually is new
only in the sense it seeks to com
pensate for meandering of the
Colorado River which made ob
solete the long-standing stream
dividing line between Arizona and
California. Gov. Paul Fannin will
head an Arizona delegation for
the ceremony.
Although final action still awaits
approval by the two state Legis
latures and the U.S. Congress, the
Morse Raps
Journalism
WASHINGTON (UPD -Sen.
Wayne Morse, D-Ore., said Friday
American journalism "has failed
in its responsibilities" to report
events truthfully and the public
knows it.
"The people of the country know
that American journalism, by and
large. . .has failed in its responsi
bilities under the First Amend
ment (freedom of speech) to tell
the truth, Morse told the Senate.
His remarks on the Senate floor
were sparked by an editorial in
the Washington Evening Star
ibout Morse entitled: "Our Ver-
Ijoso Correspondent."
Morse said that the American
press has, with "some notable ex
ceptions, succumbed to the pow
erful interests which own Ameri
can journalism."
Let me say," he added, "thai
I happen to be one politician who
for 18 years in the Senate has not
hesitated to 'take on' the press,
because I do not recognize the
members of the press as particu
larly superior men." He said jour
nalists don't read enough to keen
themselves informed because they j
are so engrossed in reading only
what they write.
c1a i. om-JI 4ju.
i l a
Uw.. . . IMi 'Kit JLMZuM LcUAl-X.
V
(A
Masonic-
cm SCOUTS SPLASH PAR
TY, 7:15 pm.. KUHS pool.
CITY FACULTY WIVES. 8
p.m., Mrs. Willard McKinney, 1245
Lldorado.
LADIES AUX. OF WW 1, t
p.m., meeting, Lena Edwards, 317
N. 9th St.
BEGINNING SCULPTURE
CLASS, 7 to 9:45 p.m., Klamath
Art Gallery, Maple Park.
OLENE . POE VALLEY EXT
UNIT, 1:30 p.m.. Facing Middle
lears, Poe Valley Community
Hall.
OSU MOTHERS CLUB, 8 p.m..
meeting, Mildred Binney, 72 1
Mitchell.
HENLEY HOME EXT. UNIT,
10 a.m.. Facing Middle Years,
fairgrounds.
W'OT.M, Chapter 467. 7:30 p.m.,
friendship. Moose Home. Betty
Ketsdever committee.
WEDNESDAY
KLAMATH ART ASSOCIATION
8 p.m., board meeting, home of
Vic Overman.
KLAMATH COUNTY COW
BELLES, 1 p.m., executives meet
ing. Pelican Cafe.
SOJOURNERS, 12:30 p.m.,
luncheon and cards, Willard Ho
tel. Newcomers welcome.
KENO HOME EXT. UNIT, 10
a.m., racing Middle Years, pot-
luck, home of Nellie Smith.
LUCILE O'NEILL PTA, 7 p.m.,
meeting and room visitation,
school.
agreement is expected to solve
many problems besetting state
and local officials for years.
When the problem reached a
critical point in 1953, California
and Arizona established parallel
Colorado River Boundary Com
missions. Their job was to locate
a common boundary of Nevada
to the international border.
Many private property owners
had been uncertain as to which
state they legally resided. In
some cases, property has been
taxed by a county on the opposite
side of the river.
Law enforcement presented
many difficulties, with jurisdic
tional questions arising daily.
The attorneys general of both
states, Robert Pickrell of Arizona
and Stanley Mosk of California,
as well as legislative leaders,
will attend the signing of the com
pact. Brown has expressed support oli
legislation before the senate and
assembly on the compact adop
tion. POWERFUL PLUNGER CLEARS
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in a jiffy!
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when your toilet overflow!
TOILAFLEX
Toilet Thu3 Plunger
Unlike ordinary plungers, Tbilaflex
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With Toil flex the full pressure plows
through the ceoRKinft mass and
swishes it down. Can't miss I
OCSIGNED TO PLFK AT t.tiV ANGIT
ACCESSED RIM TRAPS AIR & WATER
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Genuine Toileflex
$265
AT HARDWAtf STORES tVIRYWHCftE
ail ill. ujAtAJ-
1 ID
l
pm., stated meeting.
Temple.
p 1
:.
512 Main l J
STAR
By CLAY
1W Daily
According
VV21-40-d
To develop message for Tuesday,
reod words cor re ponding to numbers
or our Zodiac barh sign.
- 45-32-69
,( 1AUIUS
1 Wandtftul
2 Ntw
3 L'en
4 Kero
5 Sm.i
6 You r
7 A
8 Carefully
9Th
10 Someone's
1 1 Surp'iv
12 Presort
13 Don't
14 New
15 Good
16 Yourself
17 Luck
18 Ar9u
19 Clot
20 Ferial
22 Br.gtn
23 G.ti
24 Sh.n.no)
23 Got
26 And
2?Stor
23 Something
29 B?devi
30 T"er;
4- 7 704
65-66-74
MAY X
3- 8,102S
28-50-83 85
CANCfl
JUNE 2 J
-"34-36-51-53
73-77-78
UO
;,V - AUG. 23
Vi9-63 84 87
VIIGO
AUG 7
A stpf. ?:
J) 5- 6- 9 22
Jackson Explains Gift
MEDFORD lUPP The irrevo
cable bequest to Willamette Uni
versity of 52 per cent ownership
of the Rogue Valley Country Club
by Glenn L. Jackson of Medford.
announced this week, applies to
stock owned by the golf holding
company, Jackson explained to
day in response to queries.
It is 52 per cent of that stock,
plus 100 per cent ownership of the
recently added nine holes in the
27-hole golf course that Jackson is
leaving to the university.
The clubhouse and its facilities,
including dining room and bar,
are being purchased under an
Low, Low Prices
Grapefruit
Sunkist Coachellas . . . White
1 5 for
Radishes
bo.
LIQUID DETS,ENT
48-Oi. 99C 9-Lb. 13-Oz.
REYNOLDS WYANDOTTE Lg. Pitted
ALUMINUM FOIL OLIVES
":;,by 69 3 'rt?- loo
SCHILLING'S ZEE
BLACK PEPPER WAXED PAPER
4-oz. 35c ioo-Ff. 5C
SNOW'S FLAV-R-PAC
CLAM CHOWDER CUT BEANS
3 c' 9V 5 N t"3 98
SWIFTNING PUREX
BLEACH
3-79 Gollon69c
KORY'S
Coffee
GOLDEN POPPY
Tomato
46-Ox.
Juice in I u '- v--
GAZERO
R. POLLAN
Activity Gvitk H
to ffit Start. 'i
lPT. 22
OCT. 23 ,1,1
21-59-32-38 f
1-4641 51
31 AAJittonol eirVwn
5 Fr oo t Promise
3b Kep e:Cv
jOMiey o6j.ntt
37 O J Pav
3R Do f, indicated
39 A.oy .9 Thrf ho:d
40 Nf 70 Thn
4 I Let 71 R.monca
42 PropMttmn 72 Toooy
43 Oigonii 73 Yjf
44 Your 74 Enqoyemenr
4b U 75 Rest
4a Them 7fS fcntef
47 Fned 77 Few
4P Coh 78 Asking
49 Tcnpest 79 And
S) L'p SO Yir
51 butcei 81 Picture
52 On 8? ApproocKea
53 Are 83 Their
54Fr,vn 84Te
55AMo'f P3Slev
Sr. In fr. R.;
57Eusiresi 87Teapo
Ni Fatly PR You
59Ruv l"l.ow
t-OAnd OO Plans
JO Adverse dKcmul
tcotrio
kO-71-82 88V$y
SACITTAKIUS
NOV 23 g
'3 44 55 589'
70-75-79 86 i J
CAPIKORN
CHC. 23
MN. 20 VTyV
1- Ml-23.
.17-47-68 1
AQUARIUS
M. 21 5-
FEB. 19
14-19-26-31-1
J8-76-80-81V?'
nscis
Ftl. 20
21 VVr
'35 39 54-59
62-67-89-90 y
existing contract by the golf club,
which is composed of social and
playing members of the Rogue
Valley Country Club. When this
contract is completed, the build
ing and its facilities will be oper'
ated separately from the land.
The land, which will lie under
control of the university, will pro-
vine it witn perpetual income
since members using the course
will pay rent for the privilege.
Jackson has held the stock since
l!)30. He obtained it during the
depression when he reorganized
and developed the present Rogue
Valley Country Club.
. . . "S&H" Green Stamps ... Plus The Largest
And..; $120,009 CASH
$1100
& Gr. Onions
0)c
2 u jmiFnw
fl tftov W f P U II U r UL JzA
Pricet Effective Through Wednesday Night While Quantitiei Last Store
HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath
Medical Society Favors
Salk Polio
The subject of a mass immuni
zation clinic using oral polio vac
cine was discussed recently at a
meeting of the Klamath County
.Medical Society, but the group
decided against such a program
since the State Roard of Health
does not recommend the use of
Type III oral polio vaccine be
cause of the possibility of compli
cations. The group decided instead to
continue the present county pro
gram of Salk Vaccine immuniza
tion. The possibility of complications
due to the use of the oral vaccine
is very remote, however, with
trouble occurring in about one
case in a million.
Dr. Seth Kerron, Klamath Coun
ty Health officer, was asked to
make a survey of the present
immunization status of school chil
dren in Klamath Falls.
Dr. Kerron obtained his infor
mation through slips sent home
to parents and each child's medi
cal record at school. Some slips
weren t returned and the survey
wasn't 100 per cent accurate, how
ever, it indicated that 80 per cent
of the children in Klamath Kalis
and immediate suburbs have been
immunized against polio.
The survey doesn't indicate how
many pie-school children and
babies have been vaccinated.
"Any time that 80 per cent of
the young population of a commu
Swift's Premium Ni
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HAMS 369
f S-Lb. TIN tsbS-
Mi& fife
0- FItHI IMf FlPPr
SWIFT'S
Chicken Stew & Dumplings
24-oz.
STARKIST CHUNK
STALEY'S PANCAKE AND WAF FLE
SYRUP
LARGE AA FARM FRESH
EGGS
GOLD MEDAL
FLOU
ft v
Fallj. Ore.
Monday,
Immunization Program
nity is immunized the commu
nity is considered by health au
thorities to be protected from a
severe epidemic," Dr. Kerron
said.
The group agreed that Salk vac
cine immunization is very valu
able and urge that children from
three months of age and up should
be vaccinated and given this pro
tection. It was urged that all
parents take their children to
their family physician for immu
nization before the polio season.
The county health department
has a clinic each Monday from 3
to 4:30 p.m. at which time polio
EXCHANGE CONTINUES
MIAMI (UPD - A Pan Ameri
can airways four-engined jet is
scheduled to ferry 15,000 pounds
of medicines to Cuba today and
is expected to return here with
about 100 Cuban-Americans seek
ing asylum.
The Red Cross chartered DC6B
will carry the supplies as part of
the $53 million in ransom prom
ised Fidel Castro in return for
the release of 1,113 Bay of Pigs
prisoners at Christmas time.
INCOME TAXES
S Your Reliable Incom
TAX CONSULTANT
CHAS. HATHAWAY
Auditing Bookkeeping
120 N. 10th TU 4-5473
Selection of Food In
GIVE-AWAY
BOILING BEEF
PLATE AND
BRISKET
c
No. Vi
Tin
Gal.
Doz.
25
Lbs.
If You're Not Shopping Here,
You're Spending Too Much!
We Rcse rvc The Right To Limit
4480 South 6th 1315 Oregon Ave.
Avalon and Shatto Way
PAGE-J
County's
immunization as well as diphthe
ria, whooping cough, tetanus and
smallpox vaccinations are avail
able. It is recommended by the health
department that all children re
ceive a booster for polio every
two years. They should also re
ceive immunization against the
above mntioned diseases not only
through public school age, but also
through high school and college.
Dr. Kerron also warned thai
people intending to spend any
time in the eastern part of the
county or state should be vac
cinated against Rocky Mountain
Spotted Fever. Colorado Tick Fe
ver is more prevalent in the east
ern area, but vaccine for it is not
available.
The time to get protection
against these tick diseases is
now, since April and May are
the most dangerous months.
Dr. Kerron also indicated that
the flu bug has spread as far
as Montana and Arizona now and
residents should be vaccinated as
soon as possible. Kerron recom
mended that older people espe
cially should get the protection.
Southern Oregon
March 11, 1983
1ft M
Tillamook Cheese
or c
Lb.
$29
$75
Houn 9:00 - 8:00 P.M.
1