PAGE 4A HERALD AND II ill ::. fM ) Iti DRIVE NETS ANOTHER $2,000 The drive to raiia funds for ha construction of the Presbyterian Intercommunity Hospital netted another $2,000 recently when Boyd San derson, administrator of the hospital, received a donetion in that amount from Mrs. Ernest Mullis, representing the Soropitmists of Klamath Falls. The club is now endeav oring to raise the remainder of its $3,000 pledge. Observing the presentation is Ross Ragland, president of the hospital board of directors. Meanwhile, workmen at the hos pital site were continuing excavation work. Weather permitting, the footings for the foundation would be laid within the next two weeks, Sanderson said. Play Sets New Dates The Klamalh Civic Theatre's production of "Blithe Spirit," Slated or a six-day run begin ning last Friday, haa been rescheduled to open Nov. 22 In the Pine Grove Koom o the WUIard Hotel, Bill Hagorman, director of the show, has re ported. Additional performances are scheduled for the following Sat urday and Sunday with the fi nal showing 6et or Friday, Nov. 29. ' The opening performance on Nov. 22 is being planned for formal dress, Hagerman stated. People desiring to assist the production staff are urged to contact Clarke Falrchlld at TU 4-457. Demos Plan DeLap Talk Charles DcLap will be t ti e featured speaker at tlie Demo cratic Club meeting on Nov. 20 at 7:30 .p.m. In the Shasta Grange Hall. lie will explain the duties and unctions of the Klamath County clerk's ofice. - The club has planned a ae ries of meetings, with each fea turing a speaker who has served as a member of one of the various county offices. The purpose is to acquaint voters with the functions of each of fice. The public Is Invited to at tend any of these meetings. Re freshments will be served. Heart Group Plans Campaign The organizational structure for the coming Heart Fund Campaign In February 19M was set up at a recent meeting of the local committee, when fund raising methods were outlined. Quinten Steele, Klamath-Lake County general chairman, pre sided. Those attending were Bill James, Klamath Falls; chair man for Bonanra: Jack Thom as, public information chair man; Bob Merrill, p e c I 1 cvejits chairman and Gene Mil ligan, organization chairman. Hoyt To Head Shasta Board MOUNT SHASTA Fletcher Hoyt, a member of the Mount Shasta High Sclrool faculty, was elected president of the Mount Shasta Planning Commission at a recent meeting. Paul lavas si is the new vice president. Duplicate Bridge Players Slate Masterpoint Tourney The monthly masterpoint du plicate bridge tournament of tlie Klamath Falls Unit Com mittee gets started at 130 p m today, at the Winema Motor Ho. lei, in one of three special MP events slated for Klamath Falls during tlio next several weeks. The next masterpoint event is slated or the following Satur day evening, Nov. 23, 8 o'clock at the Klamath Bridge Club. On Dec. 8, the Unit Committee will conduct Us annual election party. 1:30 pm., at the Wine ma Hotel. Results of local tournaments thia week: Lakeshor EC (Tuesday). NS. 1, Pauline Offield leona Rob ertson; 2. Mrs. I. C. Lemler Mary Juckeland; 3, Mrs. U S. Barry . Mr. N. E. Retterath (Adel, Ore.), EW, 1, Muriel Vandenberg . Sandra RicharU; NEWS, Klamath Flli, Oregon Unsworth Will Return To Courtroom Monday William Unsworth begins the latest in a series of legal bat tles Monday morning when he goes on trial or second-degree murder in tlie shooting of a man in Beally more than a year and a half ago. Unsworth, 53, was convicted of second degree murder for tlie shooting of Tony Moore, but the conviction was set aside by the Oregon Supreme Court last summer. Unsworth was then re-indlct-ed or the slaying, but a tech nicality nullified this Indictment and he was again indicted for the murder last month by the grand Jury. He is scheduled to go on trial in the circuit court of Judge Donald A. W. Piper at 10 a.m. Monday. During his legal battles, Uns worth has changed court ap pointed attorneys once. The alleged murder occurred April 15 In Unsworth's tiny cab in on the edge of Beatty. Moore was a drifting ranch Jiand and it is believed he was killed during a drinking bout with Unsworth and his wife in tlie cabin. Moore was shot with a .30-30 Winchester. Au thorities said the rifle barrel Kl'BK BEC0MK8 GRANDPA WASHINGTON (UPD - Sec retary of State Dean Husk be came a grandfather Friday or tlie first lime. A 6 pound, 0 ounce son was born to David B. Rusk and Del cia Rusk at Columbia Hospital here. The baby has been named Gregory Marshall Rusk. Funerals mi Funoral lorvlcaa for Calvin Harold till! will bo hold from thi Clnl of WorrJ't Klimolh Punorol Homo Mondoy, Nov. II, of I p m. Conelud IPS torvlcol Klimolh Mlmorlll Park. TOIIUS Sunorol lorvlcai for Botllo Ann To blut will bo hold from thl Choptl of Word'l Klamalh Punorol Homo Mon day, Nov. II, at 11 a.m. Concluding orvlcoi Klamath Mamorlal Park. Automation May Cause Too Much Leisure Time SAN FRANCISCO (UPD -One of tlie nation's leading businessmen said Saturday that by 1985 automation will have piled up so many dij-posable working hours tliat each work er may have to take a year off from his job to make up for It. Ralph Lazarus, president of Federated Department Stores, said recent studies indicated 2, Virginia Calhoun - Winnie StjU; 3, Frances Ross-Bertha Harlan. Lakeshore BC i Thursday'. NS, 1, Wavne Rawnon Wayne Kimball; 2, Frances Ross-Helen Schaofter; 3, Crystal lloiike. Lols Serruys. KW, 1, Virginia Calhoun-Phyllis Nelson: 2, Mis'. I. C. Lemler- Father Hal Fumo; 3, Dr. and -Mrs. Setli Keiron. Klamath BC (Saturday, Nov. '. 1. Helen Mueller - Ada Spnoat; 2, Kthel Daws-rVnnic Vandenberg; 3-4 (Ue. Mary Ramp Lucille lloiuel and Pol ly Merrill Leona Robertson. 6unday, November 17, 1961 was puslied into the man's stomach and the trigger pulled. Crash Hurts Local Pair Dr. Frank W. Walters. Klamath Falls physician and surgeon, and his mother-in-law, Mrs. B. F. Argile, are recover ing in Klamath Valley Hospital rom Injuries they received In an accident Thursday Just north of Weed. Calif. Dr. Walters and Mrs. Argile, who has been living with tlie family at Uicir home here, were transferred to Klamalh Falls Saturday by Peace Ambulance from Mount Shasta where they had first been hospitalized. The two were injured when Dr. Walters' car lctt the road and struck a tree, demolishing the vehicle. A member of the family said Dr. Walters suffered a m i 1 d neck fracture while Mrs. Ar gile received a chip in her pel vic bone, lacerations and an Injured eye. Friends have been asked to wait until next week before visiting them at the hos pital. School Board Meets Monday The Klamath Elementary School Board will meet Mon day evening in regular session, with a brief agenda of items to consider. The directors are slated tn consider an appointment to the budget committee, a report on vision testing, and class loads in excess of 30 students. The meeting will bepin at 7:30 p.m. in the schools admin istration building on Alameda Avenue. that technological improvements In production are rapidly forc ing the day when a man's lei sure time w ill be more than he knows what to do with. "It is an awesome prospect that the new leisure might force us to search for the meaning of life within ourselves." he told the biennial session of the Fam ily Service Association of Amer ica. "You may think tliat to treat leisure as a plague is like treat ing love as a communicable dieae. To he liberated from the prison of work has been a consuming desire of msn ever since lie learned to write down his dreams " Tlie head of Uie huge depart ment store operation said tliat since working tin during tlie first 40 yeara of thia cen tury was cut by one-third, "it should lake us (ewer decades to roieat the performance." "II therefore seems to be that a reasonable hypothesis on which to proceed is iiiat by, let us say, lUSS, e sKxild lae accumulated at least a decade of disposable lime per person." he s.nd. Bob Jont' Southern Oregon Insurance Agency So. 6th Shasta Way TU 2-4671 fSAFSCO Oregon Legislators Ponder Expensive Boardman Issue SALEM (UPll -Is the Board man project the beginning of a great industrial complex in the sandy wastelands of northeast ern Oregon, or is it one of the biggest boondoggles in Oregon history? Lawamkers pondered that question today after being told they would have to pungie up $322,000 in addition to the $900. 000 they have already authorized for the project. In a s p e c i a I message. Gov. Mark Hatfield asked the legisla ture to pass emergency legisla tion to clear legal entangle ments holding up completion of the project. "Without such legislation this project may f a i 1," Hatfield warned. The governor's emergency bill was rushed to the Ways and Means Committee, which was told that if the legal cloud was not cleared, the Boeing Co. wouldn't honor the 77-year lease it signed July 1. That would leave Oregon with 34,000 acres, for which it has paid $753,000. Knthuniasm Lacking Fee Raise Opposed SALEM (UPD As the Uni versity of Oregon band played lustily outside, the State Senate Saturday voted for a collision course with the State Board of Higher Education. The Senate passed, 18-U. a resolution directing the board to keep tuition fees and admission standards at their present levels throughout the 1963-05 biennium. Tlie board already has ap proved a general plan for an $8 million adjustment in its budget. Key features of tlie plan call for a temporary raising of admission qualifications at three institutions for the fall, 19G4, term, and for a general increase in tuition next year. The Senate-passed resolution now goes to the House. , U -t" , ' AIRMAN FOR OCTOBER A.2.C. Bruce A. M a y a 1 1, computer maintenance specialist (or Keno Air Force Sta tion, is presented a $25 check and a three-day pass by Lt. Col. Martin P. Alger, station commander, upon his selec tion as Keno Airman of the Month tor October. A native of Falls River, Mass., Mayall came to Keno in April, 1962. Spend YOUR f-'ii'ti'ini'i w . There was no indication law makers would rush in at once to pull the Boardman chestnuts out of the fire. Further hearings were scheduled. Secretary of State Howell Ap pling Jr. termed the project "like jumping out of an air planeonce you Jump, it's too late to change your mind. "We're past the point of no return. I wish we had never started." But Sam Mallicoat, state plan ning and development director who has motliered the project since it was launched three years ago, said "Boardman has the potential of becoming a tre mendous industrial complex." Boeing has refused to activate the lease because common school lands, which have special legal status, became involved. Plan Complicated The bill proposed by the gov ernor involves a complicated series of legal maneuvers de signed to clear any possible le gal cloud. The plan: Borrow $1 million from the public employes retirement fund and the industrial accident fund. Pay the Navy $522,000 cash for clear title to land once own ed by the service. -Pay $385,000 to buy the school lands in the tract. Pay $92,000 for added ex penses. Have the common school fund buy the $1 million loan. Have $50,000 a year of the Bill Questions Authority Of Hatfield To Cut Funds SALEM (UPD - A measure specifically canceling capital construction projects was sub mitted by the Ways and Means Committee Friday at the re quest of House Speaker Clar ence Barton, throwing wide open the question of the governor's the WINTER in NEW HOME..! First Federol Savings ond Leon is in th business of helping folks -like you to enjoy the wonderful feeling that comes from owning your own lovely homo. Some families like small homes, some like forger homes. Whatever your needs may be, the First Federol Loan councilors will plan a loan to fit your needs. Do it NOW! Come in TODAY for friendly help with your planning. FIRST FEDERAL O'avingb an ft fcan 540 MAIN STRUT $60,000 annual rental fee go to the School Fund to repay the loan. Keep the extra $10,000 as a "cushion" to pay for insurance 'there still are unexploded bombs on the land) and opera tion, which will come to about $2,000 a year, and set aside the remaining $8000 to pay taxes to Morrow County. The state has guaranteed the county it would not take the land off the tax rolls. But under questioning, it was brought out there was no guar antee the annual tax bill might not surpass the total amount of rent collected. Probe Planned Into Education SALEM (UPD - The Ways and Means Committee recom mended Friday that the Legis lative Fiscal Office hire another analyst and have the Interim Education Committee proceed as planned with a probe into higher education. The decision was made after Sen. Walter Pearson, D-Port-land, charged there was an "Iron curtain between tlie leg islature and the State Board of Higher Education." Pearson said "we have to find out what is going on in the sys tem of higher education." He wanted $35,000 set aside for such a study. authority to cut budgets. Barton told the committee that the governor did not have the constitutional authority to elimi nate capital construction items as he proposed in his austerity program. Barton said he, Senate Presi dent Ben Musa, Atty. Gen Ro bert Y, Thornton, and legisla tive counsel Sam Haley had de termined at a meeting that the governor did not have the au thority to make the cuts. Three Ways and Means mem bers, Reps. Beulah Hand, D Milwaukie; Stafford Hansel, R Hermiston, and Sidney Leiken, O-Roseburg, voted against sub mitting the bill. They either oppose some of the proposed cuts, or want tlie entire question of the governor's allotment authority opened for close review. The measure proposed by Bar ton withdraws $9.7 million from higher education's Building pro gram, $2.4 million from the board of control, and $1.3 mil lion from community colleges. Rep. John Mosser, R-Beaver-ton, who has adamantly insisted the legislature should lay down rigid guides for Hatfield, glee fully voted to introduce the measure. "This will bring the whole question of our obligation to in sist on guides out in the open," he noted. fSJoctafwn I A i BAG Maxwell House COFFEE $n49 G1P All POT ROAST Low Cost Fresh Ground Beef Short Ribs Purple Jam Burgerbits $29 Pizza Mix w 49' Soup J,:00 Lasagne 3i$100 Jumbo Sweet, Juicy 1 -lb. Pkgs. Avocados Oranges Carrots 25L 2:25' 2:19' Specials For Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday RIGHT RESERVED jljr QVQjj Q f TOWN & COUNTRY SHOPPING CENTER 3800 So. 6th Gold Medal 104. 0 P Lumberjack 22-oz. Cuts Tender In 3 - 45 Lean and Meaty Plums Flav - 2'i C J Mayonnaise 5' Delrich Aged lb. 35 33 Approx. lb. Pkgs. lb. lb. R - Poe tint