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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 13, 1963)
Civil Defense Meets Planned Across State A series of conferences and training sessions in civil defense training and education will be adminbtered in Oregon during the next seven months by the Division of Continuing Educa tion of the Oregon State Sys tem of Higher Education. A session is not scheduled for Klamath County but conferences have been set for Wedford in March and Bend in April, at dates to be announced later. The program will be conduct ed under a contract with the VS. Office of Civil Defense, ac cording to Dr. James W. Sher burne, vice chancellor for con tinuing education. Similar pro grams have been contracted with universities and colleges Jacoby On Bridge NORTH (D) 1J A 8 5 32 K2 A963 J109 WEST EAST AQ 4.K.74 VAJ 98 7 6 4 V1053 K2 Q J 8 4 Q6 4 752 souTn 4t A J 10 9 9 VQ 10 7 5 AK83 No one vulnerable North East South Went Pass Pass 1 V 3 V 3 A Pass 4 Pass Pass Pass Opening lead4) K Foe Makes Mistake By OSWALD JACOBY Newspaper Enterprise Assn. West's three heart bid was one of those pre-emptive jump overcalls that are designed to caused North to make the de cided overbid of three spades. Paul Levitt who sat South went on to game. West made the fine opening lead of the king of diamonds. Paul looked over dummy and didn't like what lie saw. There appeared to be two diamonds losers, one heart loser, at least one trump loser and a possible club loser. Then Paul proceeded to make the contract. He let the king of diamonds hold, but won the continuation. A heart lead was taken by West's ace and he re turned the suit whereupon Paul was able to get rid of his re maining diamond. Now Paul led the deuce of spades from dummy and played his own nine. West won with the queen and found himself in an end play. A heart lead would give Paul a chance to ruff in his nun hand and dis card a club from dummy. Af ter that Paul would play the ace and king of clubs, ruff a club, and finesse against East's king of spades. West chose to lead a club. Dummy's jack won the trick and the finesse was taken against the king of spades. Do you readers see how West might have beaten t h e y hand? All he had to do was to lead the queen of spades when he was in with the ace of hearts. Learn the pre-emptive jump overcall with a copy of "Win at Bridge." Just send your name, address, and 50 cents to: Oswald Jacoby Reader Service, care this newspaper, P.O. Box 4K9. Dept. A. Radio City Sta tion. New York 13, N.Y. Q The bidding has been: South West North East 1 A Pass 1 V Pass 2 Pass 3 Pass Yoti. South, hold: AA! VA! RJ7 AAQ1098 What do you do? A Bid thrre spades. Ton aren't passim: thrre no-trump by this bid and too are not showing- a real spade salt. TODAT'S QUESTION Instead of bidding three dia monds your partner jumps from two diamonds to four. What do you do now? Answer Tomorrow STEWART-LENNOX FIREMEN BALL SAT., Nov. 16 Fair Haven School 9:00 to 1:00 Door Prizes Music By PETE COLLEY'S BAND in 42 states by the civil defense office. A series of 14 one-day confer ences will he scheduled through out the state for civil leaders and persons in local, county, and stale government. Each conference will be de signed to provide current infor. mation on civ il defense require ments, assist in evaluating local capabilities for civil de(ene, advise local officials in the de velopment of plans (or future action, and explain assistance available through state and fed eral government agencies. Four training s e s s i o n s for shelter management instructors will be conducted early next year as part of the program. They will be designed to provide trainees with extensive knowl edge of shelter operation and maintenance so that they ill become able to instruct other persons from their respective communities in such methods. Dale E. Price, staff member of the Division of Continuing Education m Eugene, has been named administrator of the Ore gon program. Instructors w ill be Louis D. Farnsworth and Gor don E. Newton, also of Eugene. The first of the one-day con ferences w ill be held in Pendle ton, Wednesday Nov. 13, the second in La Grande, Nov. 20. The Pendleton conference will include persons from Umatilla and Alorrow counties, and the La Grande program will have participants from Union, Wal lowa and Baker counties. Conferences have been tenta tively scheduled in Dallas and Hillsboro in December; Tilla mook, The Dalles, and Portland in January; Salem, and again m Portland in February; Al bany in March, Coquille in Ap ril, and Burns in Mav. DENNIS THE MENACE Tun Pn? .1 -Hi County Museum Recorded High Attendance In October Wednesday, November 13. 1963 HMLD AND NIWS. Klim.lh HIH. On. PAGE 7A I THINK HE'S FAINTED' GSTtfE A 6U5S Of SWKWMilKSWft! Red Paper Denies Soviets Promised To Leave Cuba OX THE MOVE ANN ARBOR, Mich. (UPI) Most Americans move eventually to a different area from that in which they were born, according to a study by the University of Michigan's urvey Research Cen ter. " MOSCOW i UPD The gov ernment newspaper hvestia said Tuesday night the Soviet Union never promised the United States to withdraw all Russian troops from Cuba. It said the question of Soviet troops in Cuba "is a probem between the Soviet Union and Cuba" and no one else. A leading Izvestia article signed "Observer" referred to a claim attributed to U.S. spe cial envoy W. Averell Harriman that Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev promised him that all Russian troops would be pulled out "It is difficult to say with whom this version originated, with Harriman himself or the New York Herald Tribune w hich quoted him," Izvostia said. The Soviet newspaper ap parently referred to a Washing- 1776 Antwar to Previous Puizls ACROSS 1 "Light Horse ' Harry" 4 Breeds Battle transmitter a Craw 3fl lacking 40 Malt beverage. 41 Wljtwam 8 British General 45 Boston - 12 Marine eagle SO Klag maker 13 African wild 51 Whalea sheep 52 Baghdad is Its 14 Spoken capital 15 " Anthony" 54 Loan rate (ab.) Wayne 55 Ceremony 1R Weaver's reed M Ireland 17 Communists 57 Papal name 18 New Zealand 58 Affirmative1 barrier reef votes 20 French admiral 59 "Yankee (1778) 22 Lord SjEITlHl 1-liO BI IA.IPIA Mi ALOE le V A BOL.O ujes JwIair J s t e w UaIsit OkTlE R4SES IE CjALlgt HE P R 5S YlS O B ER oe elp o SB mere see kMs y njs s JL P E N N I SMR E L. AT E 5 'HElAfE A R WIND T OlP I D E A IaMnIo ie re va5t IbIeIaIm Ir Tip IeirisIe British statesman 24 Shoshonean Indian 25 Wall paintings 28 Part of head 31 American revolutionary victory 34 Hindustani 35 Presently 38 Element divinities 9 Valuable minerals 10 Lumps 1 1 Otherwise , 60 According to (Hinduism) pharmacopoeia 21 Stock buying; tab privileges (ab.) DOWN 2.1 Hovel 1 Tropical fruit 28 Thefts 2 Muse of poetry 27 Lifetimes 3 Finisher 28 Mistake 4 Chance 29 Fuss t Iris (comb. 30 Stampede , form) 31 Adams, 8 Enticement patriot 7 Tongue-shaped 32 Collection of 8 Grepk seainai sayings M Fipht .74 Sav 37 Termite 39 Winnliks process 40 Sections of churches 42 Modern French soldier 43 Saxon rff 44 Bar (law) 4ft Colonial loyalist 46 Iroquoiin Indian 47 Deeds 48 (.roup of threa 49 Adventure story (coll. 53 Small harrrl pi n P3 55 ryr 38 I p" l K6 1 Pr 152 fcr 8 ,10 Pi w to I W w 43 IH t3T RESERVE YOUR DATE NOW Christmas Parties and Meetings Dinner parties for from 20 to 70, orld cock toil parties of any size ore ovoiloble for you ot the Pelican. Set your dotes now. We will help ycu plon the menu and moke sure your party or business meeting is a complete suc cess. PELICAN CAFE and Wing (LOUNGE) 722 Main ton column by .losoph Al.sop pub lished in the Oct. 31 issue ot the Paris edition of the New York Herald Tribune. It said in part: "When Gov. Averell Harri man was in Moscow, Nikita S. Khrushchev twice assured him that all Russian troops would eventually he brought home from Cuba. Why should we keep them there? Khrushchev asked, and added that the men of the Jled Army did not like being there either because of the sleamy Cuban climate ..." Izvcstia said Khrushchev made no such pledge to Harri man when the American this summer asked him about the withdrawal of the Soviet troops and quoted the Russian as re plying with an involved parable. "The Soviet Union will con tinue to extend every possible help to brotherly Cuba," Izves tia said. "The problem of sta tioning troops in Cuba is a prob lem between the Soviet Union and Cuba. Attendance at the K 1 a m a t h County Museum during October attained the second highest to tal for that rrmnih in the his tory of the museum, Curator Mrs. Lloyd Seely has disclosed. Last month, SH9 visitors regis tcrcd at the museum, exceed ing by 270 the total number of people recorded there for the same month last year. Of the more recent figure, 4!H) were from Klamath Kalis, 28 from Klamath County, i57 rei resentcd !R states, and five were visitors from Canada, Austra lia and Africa. Also during the same month, the museum received 12 exhibits which are now on display or will be exhibited soon, Mrs. Seely said. Among the donations were samples of minerals found lo cally by Calvin Lees, Htc. 1, Box Ml, and Kenneth1 Christin, 121 Iowa Street, both of t h i s city. l.ecs' display includes cal cite and moss and banded ag ates he collected along the ("reenspiings Highway, while Christin donated an irridescent cinder of Bernite. Four other specimens con cerned insects and wildlife. Gary Nicholson, 640 Conger Avenue, contributed a dragon fly and Sam Warmack, 2205 Oak Street, donated the jaw bone of a deer. The two youths collected the specimens during a field trip made by students of Pelican, Riverside, Altamont, and Kail-haven schools. Dale C. Mahnn, Itte. 3. Box 235 A. do nated a number of lizards col lected in the Philippine Islands by his father in 1008. The other exhibit was a mummified squir rel found in Langell Valley by Mr. and Mrs. Kloyd Taylor, Rte. 1. Box 35A. Among six other items were a hammer offered by the Klam ath Kalis Auxiliary of the Lions Club, a pair of gloves made of buffalo hide and contributed by G. R. llcrr, Menlo Way, and a collection of personal effects presented by Mrs. Mae Ander son, 343 North Tenth Street. Mrs. Anderson is the daughter of an early Klamath Falls flour mill operator. One of the remaining three displays features early day cop ies of the "Klamath Legion naire." donated bv Mrs. I. A. Baker, 327 Grant Street, whose father served for a brief pe riod at the since dismantled Fort Klamath. Doug Golden, 2305 Patterson Street, contributed a beaver trap which has been added to the fur trappers' exhibit. A series of photographs de picting scenes of the Mountain Lakes W ild Area and the south ern portion of the Skyline Trail were presented by Dick Briggs, 3905 Homedale Road, at the re quest of the museum. They rep resent a selection from a num ber of pictures taken by the do nor for tile Herald and News to illustrate several articles on tlie wilderness areas of Klam ath County. Phone 4-3873 HEATING OILS COAL PRESTO-LOGS FURNACE SALES . SERVICE Don't Risk Running Out of Fuel! Use Our "CHECK and FILL" System WESTERN OIL AND BURNER CO. of Klamath Falls 1845 So. 6h Ph. TU 4-3873 Holiday Table Contest Slated A silver tea and table setting contest will be sponsored by the Juniper Garden Club from 1 to 5 p.m. on Saturday, Nov. IS, at the Shasta Grange Hall, Shasta Way and 'Madison. Ideas for festive holiday en tertaining will be displayed by the garden clubs of the Klam ath District. The public is invit ed to attend. The Court Records MUNICIPAL COURT Nov. 11, mi Forest Cunningham, drunk, SIS for feited. Euqene Alton Montgomery, drunk, IIS or live, or 10 day). Leon Gftli pearion, drunk, MJ or flvt or 10 days. Irwin Welstr Jr., drunk, $?5 or flvt or 10 days. Milford Orland Rogeri, drunk, IIS or live or 10 days. Harold William Barrett, petty larceny, conlinutd. Paul Jmeph Jackion, drunk. tI5 or five or 10 days. Jesse St Id do, drunk, $?S or live or days. Howard A. Schram, drunk. tIS or five or lb days, Gertrude Harvell, assault with dan gerous weaoon, continued. Gtorgl Fern Moore, disorderly con duct, lib or tlvt or 10 days. Guadalupe Duran, drunk, MS forfeit ed. Jesse Otcar Merquei. disorderly con uci, I2S or -live or lOdays. Carrel ton C. Moore, dlsordtrly con duct, $?S or flvt or 10 days. Workers Flee Doomed Truck LEBANON, Tenn. (UPP Two cnnslruclion workers, smelling smoke, Tuesday jumcd from a truck laden with dynamite and ran to safe ty before the vehicle was "blown lo Mnithcrccns." The blast also broke about 200 windows, including those in the courthouse and the Leba non Airport. Matl Mlllovali, drunk, ?S or tlvt or 10 days! two counts disorderly conduct, 1100 or 20 days. Boyd Jesst Carson, drunk, $25 lorltll td. Jack Bakem, drunk, $25 or tlvt or 10 days. Dorothy Jo Moolry, drunk, 125 forfeit ed. Salvador Rodrlguei; drunk, S2S forfeit ed. Frank Nllsche, drunk, $25 forfeited. Clare Hawk, drunk, $25 forfeited. Joe Wahl, drunk, $25 forfeited. James Robert Morninggun, drunk, $50 or 10 or 20 days. Walie Raymond Hembrte, drunk, $25 or live or 10 days. Anton Johnson Jr.. drunk, $75 or flvt or 10 days. Salvador Rodrfguti Naera, drunk, $25 forfeited. Glenn Oscar Stayr. drunk, $25 forfeit ed. Kenneth David Tucker, drunk. $25 tor ftltedi disorderly conduct, $25 torleitod. Jamts Buford Dobbins, drunk, $25 for teiied. Arthur Jake O' 8 an ion, petty larceny, continued. AT SHAW'S SHAW STATIONERY 729 Main HOLIDAY BOWL ANNOUNCES FREE INSTRUCTION FOR LADIES Beginners Only! STARTING MON., NOV. 18TH . . , and will continue every Monday tor S weeki. Instruction by E I d i n a Greenwood. Phone TU 2-4648 end reserve your spot. BOWL FOR A TURKEY TURKEY SHOOTS THIS WEEK! Have Fun Learn to Bowl at the HOLIDAY BOWL 2074 S. Sixth MAS? fi Fresh, eastern of pork roasts! fed leg MAUN C&E MARKET nil. ci i KID OTCUKb bane and Wieners Swift Premium Skinless . Ground Beef C&E Fresh, Lea Locker Beef All excess fat removed lb. lb. lb. USDA Good and Choice Steer hind quarters lb. 79c 39c 39c 58c Festival Brand Fruit Cakes 89' In Fancy 2-Lb. Tin Order your Thanksgiving turkey, geese or ducks now! We will fea ture Swift's Premium Butterball Turkeys at competitive prices! Upton's Tea 48-Bag Box 'j-Lb. B 59s 79 Bulk c Cottage Tomato SAUCE 12 $1 APPLIES Your choice Red Dolicious, Golden Delicious, Rome Beauties or Jonathans. Mix or Match! r-:il Quort Nalley's MAYONNAISE Yellow Onions PniilillAUffl.. Tl'9h budded, large uuumiunci Add rest to your meals 3 19c Golden Yams F Emperor Grapes 10 Snow white heads each I 71 Smooth Skin Lb. IUL ancy Extra Fancy L Lbs, 2 Lb,. 25c Also complete petitive prices! Hills Coffee Mb. Tin 3-Lb. Tin 59 1.75 2-lb. Tin 10-ox. Instant 1" 1.09 selection of new crop nuti at com-' 8CE CREAM 9 Crater Lake Vi Gal. All Flavors New Kroft'i with Meat Sauce Spaghetti 192i-oi. pkg. 39c All Flavors - Wyler's Soup Mix 6pk9,.49c 46-Oz. Tins Standby Pineapple-Grapefruit Drink 3?$1 No. 2'j Tins Libby's Pumpkin 2?39c mm coconut tv;;!:,,..,.,.'.k. Swill Mill Imtant. 5 Pkj. VOCOQ fa, Doll Offtr Pk C&H Put in Lb. IW II.. Cnnnp wmjvii cont 7 59c 59c 98c Northern Jumbo Rolls PAPER TOWELS All grocery price In this ad effective Hint neit Wednesday, tubec t e stock en hand. Meet and prodoee pricee effective Hirw Sofvrday. Downtown Molin, Oregon Always Fret Parking tV' Right Reserved to Limit ami -4