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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 8, 1960)
PAGI l-A 4 . Tktnitj, December 1, 1M0 Inconsistent Advice Cited By ANN LANDERS Dear Ann Landers: I've been . reading your column carefully for many years. I have' noticed .an inconsistency In some of your ad- -4 vice and I t wish v you ) would explain in print bow vou arrive at ' j conclusions. . . In some cat- es vou advise a wife to "see a lawyer about separate roofs and make pure he sends the sup port checki ln the mail." You advise other wives to "keep the home together for the kids' sake." Why? OBSERVANT READER Dear Observant! You eaa be sure when I suggest separate roofs, the reader has Indicated she tried everythlBf bat it was hopeless, la ease of extreme mental cruelty or physical vio lence I encourage separation. It's often the alternative to cracking up. No woman should live with a man who knocks her around and it a threat to life and limb. When a wife writes that her tasbud hides girlie calendars, phone his mother every eve ning, goes on freqoent and fishing trips, or is time philanderer and she "but he's a good father and the kids are crazy about hlm"-l ad vise her to stick. I feel It's bet ter for the family If the wife h abto to make a difficult adjust ment and keen the family to gether, than it Is to throw the Dear Ann Landers: Two years ago (after three years of happy married life) my husband's father died and he decided we should move in with his mother "to pro tect his Inheritance." ; His dad left a lot more money than anybody thought he had. My husband and his older broth er don t get alone, wnen nis mother invited the older brother and his Wile to move into her home they refused. My husband was then asked, and decided It would be a good way to get the Inside track. . I am miserable here. Whenever I want to buy new hat or a dress, my mother-in-law makes over an old one. She sew tons in my bose and says "You can wear them they're good enough." My husband gives her his pay. ; check to prove what a devotod son he Is. I want to start a family but my husband talked It over with his mother and she de cided shecan't stand the noise. Please tell me what to do. f EDNA Dear Edaa: Tell your husband he bat thirty day to move y out el that snake pit If be bat willing, leave him with Mama. Be euro to give him your new dresa so he'll know where to tend the support checks or Join you when he srowt up enough to act like a A few weeks ago I received a silver cross on a chain as a gift from a pen-pal. Tonight I was dressing to go to a dance and 1 put the cross on- My mother asked me to take it off. She said it is not proper to wear a cross to a dance. I havo seen other girls wear crosses to dances and told her so. She said she didn't care what other girls did and I was not allowed to wear it. Please tell me if she is wrong or right. IN THE DARK Dear Ioc She's wrong. A cross is a religious symbol which Is 'at home" anywhere. If alcohol Is robbing you or someone you love of health and dignity, send for Ann Landers booklet, "Help For The Alcohol ic," enclosing with your request JO cents in coin and long, self-addressed stamped envelope. Ann Landers will be glad to help you with your problems. Send them to her in care of this newspaper enclosing a stamped, self-addressed envelope. ' " -p X' . 'I 1 1 Pit ON. - mot, au.ht jw. W rit e SALEM (AP)-A stormy three- hour hearing on a ninth grade reading anthology, "Adventures for Today," before the state Text book Commission Monday ended without specific action. Some IS Tieard residents, most ly mothers of teenagers, were told that the book will remain on the commission's approved list through 1963. Chairman Lloyd Millhollen said that the contract between the Edu cation Department and the pub "She wants a pair of nylons Kiametti Pant, oretea Strvlnf Southern Oregon and Northern California VMIinM dally (tucapf sat.) and Sunday Onto uMlihlnt Mam at Kiotanada Phone TUiano 4-illl W. 0. IwetTLAND, Publisher aa aacond cuw manor at ice at Klamatti Falls. Oreoon, at Ml loot, undar act of Can- Marcti s lit. tacend-daM po aM at Klamatti Paha. n at additional malllnt offKaa. Southern auascaiPTioN katcs Carrier 1 Vaar i Mentha 1 Vaar Carriar ant Dealero wooneay ,.t1. SIOJO ..KM .60 ,.t I TS .110.09 ..110.00 (INITIO MISS INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATED PRESS AUDIT BUREAU OP CIRCULATION tuoacrlkara not receiving delivery at their HoreMJ ant Now, aleeee phone! a Caiaawtaf. rrcuatfea TUuda ill oetere I Punt Whlteface Mountain, - highest in New York state, has an eight mile highway to its summit, 4,872 feet above sea level. . t a- ua. l ' i DONALD IILES, son of Mr. end Mrs. Ralph Biles, Klamath Falls, returned home following hit dis charge from Navy service recently. He It living with hit parents at present. Navy Photo Buss-Chinese Back-Slab Dear Ann Landers: I'm a 15- year-old girl who needs your help. uWJJJjtii cm PETER FINCH EVABARTOX TONY ERiTTON Mn!ll7ifffl Act Is Window Dressing By WILLIAM L. RYAN Associated Press News Analyst Now that they havo had their battle .of words behind the Krem tin walls, the Soviet and Red Chi nese Communists are trying 10 make H appear that they are agreed on all matters concerning world policy. The evidence is to the contrary. The fight is far from over. Now making a ceremonial tour of the U.S.S.R., Red China's Pres. ident Liu Shao-chl gave Up serv. ice Monday to Premier Kliru shchev's brand of "peaceful co existence." His words might fool the uncritical ear, but they clash with what it still going on ln the Communist press. On the day the Communist sum. mlt meeting ended, Pravda. the central organ of the Soviet party. devoted much of its second and third pages traditionally the spot for important messages to a long article denouncing those who 'distort" . Marxism-Leninism. It went back to the Marxist classics for citations to show that the movement's success "depends to a decisive degree on the inviolable unity of proletarians of all coun tries." . Pravda added: "Any violation of this unity, any disconnection in the actions of the Socialist par ties or the national groups of the working class only weakens its own position and strengthens the position of the bourgeoise. The great Marx and Kneels struggled against all attempts to pit the national interests of the proletariat aguinst its internation al Interests." Translated, Pravda meant that failure of any party to fall in line unquestionably with Moscow's leadership helps the enemy the United States and that any at tempt by a Communist party to place its own fortunes ahead of the needs of Soviet policy harms 7 fl KmtHm ' gaanjanaflnm j, ---w-1'ajMg 1 POWERFUL STARS FIND A PERFECT5T0RY! The inspiring story of two kids who. stood on Skid Row... but lived on Or torn Street! BURL IVES-SHELLEY WINTERS. MESDn-JEANSEBEKG. RORDO M0jVTA18AN-EILA FITZGERALD ggrgj HOW PUY1HG1 the world movement. What is the overriding interest of Soviet policy? It is to advance communism without serious risk of a nuclear war. The Pravda ar ticle quoted various Marxist saints as predicting that power could he seized peacefully, and as warning against ultrarevolutionary atti tudes, dogmatism and sectarian ism." The Red Chinese have been accused of all those tilings. Theory, said Pravda, is just dogma and not a guide to ac tion. This was a reminder to the Red Chinese that theory must be set aside if and when it conflicts with the best interests of the lead ing Communist nation. On the same day, an article as published by Uie Albanian Communists, who obviously sup ported tile Red Chinese at the Communist summit. They weren't buying the Kremlin thesis, despite all their doubletalk purporting to back the general Moscow line And, if the Albanians aren't buy. ing it, the likelihood is that Ihey still are taking the cue from Pci- ping. The Albanian article insisted Communists must have "no illu sions at all that peace is secured" because the balance of forces in the world has changed. Khru- snclicv s argument Is that war now can be avoided because of Soviet power. But the Albanian article insisted Soviet power could do more than provide the "possibility of peace." All events, it went on, prove that although the positions of im perialism have weakened, im perialism has neither abandoned nor will it abandon, as long as it lives, its policy of aggression and war. To picture ' peace as probable, said the article, plays into the hands of communism's enemies. So the argument goes on and on. unresolved by three weeks ot Red summit. And because it is unresolved, the Red Chinese, with their reckless and "ultrarevolu tionary" attitudes, remain a grave tnreat to peace. Parents Attend Trial In Idaho GOODING. Idah (AP) The parents, two brothers mid a sister of 22-year-old Rodger Hall of Cres cent City, Calif., are attending his murder trial here. Hall is charged with the murder of Dr. John Hunt, a Portland, Ore., forestry pathologist whose body was found in his imported car in the dcrt near this small south ern Idaho community Aug. 24, 1959. The first day of the trial Tues day was spent questioning pros pective jurors. I Hall, well-dressed with a dark suit and tic, appeared nervous and his hand clenched a handkerchief The famous opera -house of Cen tral City, Colo, first was opened in 1878. - i o - Stormy Booh Hearing Mothers Are Fuming Okay Change SALEM (AP)-A. M. Barzat of Eugene was authorized Tuesday to change his general commodity and local cartage permit from Williams Transfer Co. to a newly formed corporation by the same name. Public Utility Commissioner Jonel C. Hill said the transfer of the permit allows the corporation to provide service as a common carrier of general commodities within the cities of Eugene and Springfield. Also authorized is the movement by the firm of household goods within the limits of Cottage Grove, Creswell, Junction City, Myrtle Creek and Roseburg. Ushers, Harcourt Brace, requires that It remain, on the list. Millhollen, however, told the mothers that under commission procedure the problem of whether the book is used in Tigard re. mains up to the local school EXPORTS CLIMB PARIS (AP) French exports in the first 11 months of 1900 total the equivalent of $4 3 billion, 28 per cent more than in the same period last year. Preliminary fi nance department figures showed today that imports are also heed ing for a record high with the equivalent of .$4.3 billion worth of purchases through the end of No vember, up 27 per cent. boat- -.-, .4 . Millhollen said he was a mem ber of the commission when it approved the book and added that if another vote were taken "I would not change my mind....' Mrs. John Pfeifer of Silverton stood up during the hearing and said, "We should work to abolish free textbooks." She called free textbooks a "socialistic" practice. v"fhe protestants from Tigard presented their arguments early in the three-hour hearing ana men others from throughout the Wil lamette Valley aired views. A speaker favoring the text was Dr. John G. Watkins, chief clinical psychologist for the Veterans Hos. pital in Portland. Those speaking against the book at the hearing lar outnumbered those for it. If you seek for evil. ..you can find it," Watkins said. "You can find what you look for in the world." Watkins said the chief issue in volved in the right not to have book-burning censorship in the public schools. He said commun ism cannot be fought with com munist methods. He lives in Tigard. A number'of speakers attacked the book by saying some authors were on subversive lists. What good can possibly be ac complished If a student eagerly reads something that breaks down his very moral fibers?" asked Mrs. James Willock. . The objections of Mrs. Willock and others in the Tigard group were to certain articles in the book they called unfit for teen agers. These Included the story, I Can't Breathe," by Ring Lard- ner. An official from the Tigard school system said after the hear ing that some heads might roll over this issue, which appeared headed for a showdown before the Tigard school board. 95 10 lbs. Klamath Golden Gem Baking Potatoes Shipped anywhere in cont. U.S. In. A eludes jar of Wild Plum Jam. Or- a ders moiled on receipt ot your pay- ment. Jart Wild Plum Jam 3.93 H m crater luko roiaio uisid., m. ysit Box 519. Orders taken for moil and 4fl local delivery at . . . kluk9tlfV EIauiak Calf ii j vain s ivnci i an 3614 S. 6th Ph. TU 4-8188 (ft A carefully selected group of "most wanted" gift items taken from the Town Shop's regular stock. Quantities are limited, so hurry! III OjrKV Italian Knit Virgin Wool DRESSES SKIRTS From our regular k t o c k of famous Famous Oregon-made "olways virgin brands - Jerner, Helen Whiting, MCM wool" skirts, plus others by Rosecrest and others. Several styles. Broken sizes. and Graff. Sizes 10 thru 8. All new Only a few, so hurry! ' plaids for foil ond winter. Only 69! OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TILL 9:00 OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TILL 9:00 Famous Name Famous Cashmere Rosecrest i Sweaters Blouses Reg. $25.95 Reg. $5.98 You know the brand they're Oregon- All from our regular stock of fine made "always virgin wool" pull - overs blouses.' Cottons and dacron blends, and cardigan styles. Sizes 38 thru 42. Sizes 10 thru 18. Prints, solid colors in They're the finest cashmeres made in the most w a n t ed styles. Only 23, America. ' hurry! 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