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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 29, 1959)
0 P fAf?K 2 A HERALD AND NKWS, Klamath PalK Or Stinrtav, Nov. 20, Milwaukee Braves' Star Makes Plea For TO Seals The following letter has been re ceived at the office o the Klamath County Tuberculosis and Health Association from Allied "fieri" Schoendiensl, 195!) national honor ary Christmas Seal chairman, a well known baseball figure who cs tablished major leasue records While playing for the St. Louis Cardinals and the .Milwaukee firaves. "I'm Rreatly honored to scre as your national chairman fur the ,111.1!) Christmas Seal caniiaiyn." ;Schoendienst wrote, "and grateful (or the chance to help make this year's sale another pennant win- jner, "DENNIS THE MENACE" I "Kwn before beiii named 'chairman, 1 had a pretty row: I idea of how much the seals mean 'in the ' fisht on TB. More than j ID, WW people wrote me at the hos ipilal alter the '3ft World Series. ;They said tliey were rooting lor me and many of them added that ithey were taking extra seals this yiur to help liht tuberculosis. I "Since becomin. 110.000 oJuntfn devoted hours of their time to last year's cam paign. As a fellow who's had TB, I know that your efforts to help other people are really appreciat ed." Schoendienst has played in 10 all-star Karnes, chalked up more than 2.000 hits, batted in more than l.ooo runs. A series of X-rays campaign! taken in October, 10.18, gave the chairman. I've learned a good deallirst hint of TB, and he entered a about how TB associations operate 'hospital in November for further especially about our way ol rais- tests when the diagnosis was def ine lunrlv. I think it's great: Send-1 initely established. Surgery on one ma Christmas Seal letters right lung was performed in February iiiio I lie home giws us the chancejof this year. On March 24, he was to a-k everyone to help light TB able to leave the hospital and re and there's no high-presuiing of turn home to complete his reeov- anynne. eiy "Ol the many things I've learned since becoming chairman, the most impressive fact was that over TWECE YOU ARE. SI f?. JUST THE WAY YOU LIKE TMEAA: TWO ESSS 'AIL SHOOK UP', Rummage Sale Set By Group The Women's Association of the First Presbyterian Church plan a rummage sale lor December !) and 1 at the I'clican Theater Building. Doors will open at 8:. 'id a.m. both days. A variety of items including dish es, housewares and clothing for men, women and children will be on sale. Those having rummage to do nate may leave it at the Tine Slreel entrance of the First Pres byterian Church until December 2. On Wednesday, December 3, con tributions may be left at the sale headquarters. Mrs. Adam Miller and Mrs. Frank Peyton are co-chairmen. They all came to this VIOLENT LAND ON THE EDGE OF A CONTINENT the jangling spur ...the broad sombrero ...and the scarlet petticoat -They all came, crossing paths and gunsights ...in this biggest of all frontiers ...this greatest of all adventures! Ami . 83? Continuous Show From 12:45 p.m. 7. SiadA DAY! Feature Times: 12:55 3:15 5:40 8:00 10:20 Tom Le' Pn;e-Winmng NovbI f k Vl Becomes A Magnificent Motion Picture w ROBERT w JULIE MncffiJi gg; lasm .,.;JMIiLLLOj!PEOROAIEilZ with JACK OAKiE ALBERT DEKKER CHARLES McGRAW amt introducing LEROY "SATCHEL" PAIGE nfe . ADDED . Wolf Disney's Arctic Former Solon From Oregon, Holman Dead KUGKNE, Ore. (AP Kormer U.S. Sen. Hufus C. Holman of Oregon, flamhoyant congressional isolationist before and during World War II, died here Fri ujy. He was 82. He suffered a fatal heart at tack at the home of a stepson, Krnest Lundeen, where he had spent (he Thanksgiving holiday. Holman served in tile Senate from VXI'.l through I!M-1, when he was defeated in a hid lor the He publican renommation by Sen. Wayne L. -Morse, now a Demo crat. In that period Holman was a member of the Senate .Military Affairs Committee, now the Arm eft Services Committee. He was closely associated with such iso lationists as the committee's chairman. Sen. Robert R. Reyn olds of North Carolina, and the hie Sen. Lrnest Lundeen of Min nesota, whoso widow later became Holman's second wife. The three senators bitterly foiichl both the New Deal domes tic program and the foreign policy ol President Franklin D. Roose velt. .Morse made this the issue in his campaign against Holman in the 1!M4 primary. lie won only alter a close, bitter contest, the lirst ever lost by Holman in a long Oregon political career. During his one term he was one of the Senate's most colorful figures. He loved the pomp ol the Senale chamber and, on days be was going to speak, Holman, who had a thick head of snow white hair, would appear in a swallow-tail coat. He relished his Seiiale service to I he end. Sen. Richard L. Neu berger, Oregon Democrat, said Holman kept in steady corres pondence with him, using Senale stationery which Neuherger pro vided annually. He made one late, bid for a comeback. He organized in 1!M7 the American Foundation Inc., the purpose of which, he said, was to expose the "Roosevelt con spiracy." Holman did not say what that was but said he shared the beliels of John T. Flynn. In the fall of ltMS Flynn wrote a series of articles blaming the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in 1!MI on President Roosevelt, whom he said had decided in Jan uary of that year to go to war. The aging Holman and a hand-! I tit of associates never got Ameri can Foundation Inc. off the ground. Although a conservative in later years, he launched his career in politics as a liberal. In the lale HWs he was elected in Portland to the board of county commissioners. Later, strongly backing federal power projects like lionneville and Grand Coulee dams and public utility districts, he was elected stale treasurer as a backer of another liberal, Gov. Julius Meier. If HAMBER Via 0MMENTS by GEORGE T. CALLISON Asu'stant Mgr. KLAMATH COUNTY CHAMBER OF COMMERCE For the last two weeks, this col- I umn has been devoted to a discus sion of the 16 principal causes of consumer complaints and dissatis faction in business transactions. j'l'oday we'll run through the re mainder of this list which was compiled recently by the National Better Business Bureau. Problems sometimes arise be cause a person buying merchan dise on an installment contract fails to understand that the seller has the privilege of selling that contract to a third party without informing the buyer. This first introduction to financing matters is often a painful experience which the purchaser long remembers. He should fully understand this bank-merchant-buycr relationship, and the rights which he retains in the individual contract into which he is entering. Along this same line, trouble oft I en develops because the buyer does not understand the difference be jtween interest and finance charges. Failure of the customer to request itemization of charges plays into the hands of unscrupulous opera tors who "pack" the charges with , various cuts, splits and rake-offs. jWhen installment contracts are I entered into, customers should be j given an itemized list of the vari ous charges. I Purchasers often fail to check Itht reputation of promoters, or to I investigate fly-by - nights before 1 buying or placing orders. No one should ignore this basic maxim of sound practice. In other words, "Before you invest, investigate." Prospective purchasers s o m e times fail to obtain bids or even estimates in writing before author izing work. Written estimates based upon stated specifications protect both the buyer and the seller from misunderstanding. It is an interesting fact of buyer psychology that people frequently dislike to spend money for the ap parently intangible service offered by lawyers. And yet obtaining le gal advice before making a pur chase of a home or other major expenditures constitutes a very cheap type of insurance against pitfalls in such transactions. A lot of dissatisfaction and dis illusionment can he avoided if the buyer will be wary of appeals to his sympathy or greed. Sympathy appeals are a time-worn method for getting people to part with their money and, of course, all ol the "something-for-nolhing" propo sitions arc based on an appeal! to the greed of the prospective j victim. Unethical advertisers some-! times make airy promises and pre dictions about future matters over which they have no control. It's a sure source of a complaint when I the buyer accepts such promises! or predictions of the future asj representations of material (acts. When things go wrong with prod ucts, some careless users are ready to blame everybody except themselves. Actually, the buyer is often to blame because he has ig nored instructions for use and maintenance of the merchandise. The merchant seeking good cus tomer relations will, when neces sary, supply full instructions for the use and maintenance of the merchandise he sells. And finally, the Hit h source of complaints and dissatisfaction arises when the buyer believes he is investing in the purchase of j roum- Bwsiw km i i , , , j ln5, in (, Baeau advice jour chamber o certain stock, and secures, he has gambled '"iVf commerce constantly pJaSt, whereas, in fact, the stocks are, money manajement pioaiem .. u u m.fore vnu in... ! pure speculation. Such a person more important that the purchaser jalons J0U ,mc may find that instead of investing,! follow the sound Better Busin-imcsUMic NOW PLAYING! "Have you made love like this to any other girls before. Johnny?" Sentry Dogs Sought By Army The Army is looking for dogs to be trained for sentry duty at posts such as Nike Ajax missile cen ters. Prices range from $1 for a donat ed dog to $125 for an average specimen. Only acceptable breed is the Gorman shepherd. Females will be accepted only if they have been spayed at least 60 days pri or to purchase. Information is available at Head quarters Department of the Army, Office of the Quart ermaster Gen eral, Washington 25. D C. RICHARD EG AN tORC3Y McGUIAS SNJf DEE About one-half of all the seam lr stork ines made in the L'nited Suites arc manufactured in North Carolina. Klamath Falls. OrrRnn Sprvtnt Southern Ornrnn and Northrn California Putvuhrd dally wxcfpt Saturda hy Southern Ormon Publishing Company Main at Esplanade Phone TVxedo 4-8111 FRANK JKNKINS Editor RIU. JKNKINS. Managing IWikr H.OYD WYNNE, City Editar Fntered a aefond cla matter at post office at Klamath Kalli, Oregon, on August 20, ItH under act of Congresa. March 3, 1879. Secon d -c I a t pomce paid al Klamath Falls Oregon, and at additional mailino officaa SUBSCRIPTION RATES Carrier 1 Month i , I I SO ft Months $ OtVl 1 Year $li OO Mam - In Advanca 1 Month 1 W A Month Sfi I Year - $13 OO Camer and Dealer Week days cvpy V SvmdaM, copy . 10c UNITED PRFSS INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATED PRW A l' D I T A I ; R E A L' OF CINC I uA TION QihcnhT not receiving deliver of t'ir HcMtd and News. p;ea phne Utjlo .M1 before 1 PM After 7 "M tVn Maurice Miliar Cir cuiatictt Ranagtr at TVatdo 4-4 Sunrise Spaghetti or Macaroni Reg. 19c 14-ox. pkg. Tom. Sauce 649 Wyler Soup Mixes Beef pkg. 10' or Chicken Chiffon Facial o assnQes 400 Count Kraft SaDaidl i Qt. Carnation White Meat Chunk Style Big Family Size Tin WOW! Center Cut PORK i ID) Boneless ounc! Steak CARNATION MILK Tall Tins B cans White King SOAP King Size ls)s) Bananas 2':25c Schilling's New Duncan Hines Cake Mixes s 1 COFFEE i 5 Flavor ? 1 : II " R j Specials For Monday Tuesday Wednesday j RIGHT TO LIMIT BSSBBVED TfiWH Jisq?ps?g Cdtftt" 3800 So 6th