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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 22, 1960)
Perfectionist Is quelcher (THE BRIGHTEST STAR I - l I . By ANN LANDERS Deer Ana Landers: You never got letter like this in your life. I reed is your, column the i other day a J lilt ol the things girl il r i u years oia should be do ing around the house. I'm 14 mnA mv mnth. at) er won't let me do any of the tilings you mentioned. I showed her your col' umn and she said. "I don't care what Ann Landers says, I have to do things my own way." I WANT to polish silverware, do the dinner dishes, dust and run the vacuum sweeper, but Mom won't let me. She says I don't do things the way she does nd she never feels that the disn es are clean when I wash them. Even when I hang up my own clothes in the closet she hangs them over. She's forever "re. straightening" my drawers. Mom always has to have the last touch. Can you help me7-NOT CAPABLE Dear Nat Capable: Your moth er needs help oot you. She's a perfectionist who cast permit anyone to do anything because she needs the ego satisfaction which from doing every' thing herself. Tell her yon KNOW yoa can't do things as well as she because you haven't had her years of e perleBce. Try to get her to un derstand that anleis she gives yoa a chance to practice, you'll never learn. Yoa should have as signed dally chores. If yoa doa't pass Mom's taspectloa oa the first try da at aver until she's satisfied. ' , Dear Ann Landers: My hus band's business takes him out of the city one week out of every month. Ia there something wrong with me because I don't mind? I'm happy to sea him leave but iNPsjroNmt . joMr r Ha rt A I'm also happy to see him come home. When my friends ask, "How do you get along without your hus band all week?" I reply "Just fine." They look at me as if I were a terrible woman. They seem to think I should be pining my heart out. The week my husband is away I catch up on the mending, hea vy cleaning, reading, visiting witn friends he doesn t particularly en joyand it's fun. I'm independ ent, I go to sleep laie, get up late, and do whatever suits my fancy. Is there something wrong with me? QUEER DUCK Dear Duck: You sound perfect ly normal and refreshingly hon est. I suspect the women who needle you because you doo'i fold up like an accordion when your husband leaves town, secretly wish THEIR husbands would take off now and then. Dear Ann Landers: I'm a hap pily married woman with chil dren. I took a job in a depart ment store to make extra mon ey. My supervisor has been mak ing passes at me. He always has something smart to say such as, I had a wonderful dream about you last night." He telephones me at home to ask inane questions about the business. I just about collapse when I hear his voice on the phone. He has a reputation for being a ladies man although he's been married for years. I can't tell my husband because he's not well and I don't want to upset him. What shall I do? -OHIO D. Dear Ohio: Have you thought of working elsewhere? If this Is impractical I recommend that yon be as blunt with him as you were with me. Want him if he phones you at home again you'll the receiver down In his ear then do It. , To learn how to keep your boy friend in line without losing him, send for ANN LANDERS book let, "Necking and Petting And How Far To Go," - enclosing with your request 20 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, sell-addressed envelope, A Christmas Fantasy' BY JAY HEAVIUN PACE A HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls, Ore. tNDS TONIGHT . .. TUI WIT A eft ft klt An m mat uiuiti ufMCB I Stcrts SATURDAY iHE KEO, turre tKO CLUE show of the year "JUS - JOTlll 1 II ICT atl' Jjrr t$U ' ' tJ TECHNICOLOR LIMITED ENGAGEMENT The Perfect Hslt&y fotertatiunent M& Yea- tens To See It V Starts SATURDAY! Dec. 24th "A minutt ago . I wot crying because I did ' not have a gift for Hit beautiful child bam in the manger. end now I em PjV7 s "Why It hW" he I "Go end istk the owl in AZ' . ' oiksd ef Jeremiah the biggest fio tret. He jfv ftW ,JT Hot, Arebelle Hea will know," loidJtremiah. i . fWr and Emuwis Lamb. fVL happy because I have suddenly orawn a rail." Mid Reynard. tV emit -! Basin Briefs PORTLAND (AP) - State Sen. Walter J. Pearson, D-PortUnd, riticized the state Industrial Ac cident Commission Wednesday for allowing its address plates to be used by labor leaders. The chairman of the commis sion, Sidney Lewis, defended the usage. Pearson said I he plates were used by labor officials in distrib uting a pamphlet attacking a pro posal to revise the workmen's compensation law. The revised plan would let insurance com panies write compensation poli cies and permit employers to self- insure. Pearson, an insurance agent, said, "Such tactics as these have been adopted for only one pur pose: to protect and preserve an entrenched bureaucracy operal- 2 Performances Daily Saturday thru Monday 1:33-7:30 Mail Ortfera Filled Adults $1.49 duel. Tox) ChiMrta (Under 11) 75e m , DOORS' Of IN '11:30 j- I j AND 4:10 Henley A REORGANIZATION meeting of the Henley Sheep Club will be held at the home of Dr. Joe Rik er, 6360 South Sixth, on Thursday, Dec. 22; at 7:30 p.m. There will be election of officers. Boys and girls desiring to join should plan to attend. Chiloquin KLAMATH RESERVATION Jaycees in Chiloquin will have Santa Clans as their guest Fri day, Dec. 23. He will visit the elementary school at 12:30 p.m. and pre-school children may meet Santa by the Christmas tree in Chiloquin at 1:30 p.m. There will be a gift for every child. Henley BLY SQUARE DANCE GROUP will not dance Saturday, Dec. 24, due to the holidays. Glenn Slur- divan, caller for the group, is re cuperating from surgery at his home here. lOMMCi MRS. FRANK CHALI.IS. a Bo nanza School bus driver, is ill at Klamath Valley Hospital. MR. AND MRS. GLENN HUFF MAN spent the weekend at Ash land. Their son, Larry, is home from the naval base at San Diego for the holidays. PAT HUGHES, 9-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Dean Hughes who suffered polio in the early fall is still at Sacred Heart Hos pital in Eugene. Cards will reach him there. FRED BECHDOLDT, ' son of Mr. and Mrs. Claude Bcchdoldt, and Bill Bond,- son of Mr. and Mrs. Jim Bond, are home for the holidays. Both are in the Navy. MRS. JACK McCARTfE has re turned to Bonanza after attend ing funeral services for her sis ter, Margaret Alice Tharratt,. at Santa Rosa. Her, sister, Mrs. Chris Christopherson of Portbla, came home with Mrs. McCartie fnr m faur Aava ! MR. AND MRS. L. F. NICHOLS and three sons left Langell Valley Friday to spend several weeks with relatives and friends in Ar kansas. - RAMONA BOOMER, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Boomer of Lorella Store, has been confined to bed for some time and will not be back in school until after January 1. BONANZA COMMUNITY TREE which is decorated in the center of Bonanza Park stands 30 feet tall. Santa Claus will be there at 7:30 p.m. Friday, Dec. 23. with treats for all the community chil dren. It Is sponsored by the Bo nanza volunteer firemen. DOROTHY KELLER of Port land is visiting her brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Willis and family here. RICHARD BURNETT and Ron aid Ketchum both students at Shasta Junior College spent the weekend with their parents. MRS. FLORENCE HORN Is in Bonanza for several weeks to be with her son, Jack, who is home from Corvallis for school vaca tion. Mrs. Horn has been in Al- turas for several months with her 99-year-old aunt, Annie Cline, who is recovering from a broken hip. TEENAGERS enjoyed ice skat ing and dancing at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Bud Harris on Fri day evening. MR. AND MRS. LELAND HAR RIS have recently gone to South ern talllornia and Arizona lor several months. MR. AND MRS. SANTFORD JONES returned home Dec. 16 from a month's trip visiting rela tives and friends in Texas. MRS. MARY WILLIS and daughter, Betty Gayle, of Canyon ville spent a few days with their son and daughter-in-law, Rev. and Mrs. Eugene Willis and fam ily. LAWRENCE HANKINS has re turned home after spending the weekend in Klamath Valley Hos pital. Hankin's son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Dor- an, have returned to their home in Salem after a recent visit. ., MR. AND MRS. ART MEEKER and small son arrived from Cor vallis to spend the holidays with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Mike Ketchum of Bonanza and his par- Pearson Criticizes Use tealuK,m ui riares ty union roen on Timber ents, Mr. and Mrs. Loren Meek er of Cedarville. MR. AND MRS. ORVILLE DE- VAUL spent a few days at Grants Pass with his brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Con- ley, and family. CHESTER SCHOOLER went to Boise to bring Verona Dayley, who attends college there, home for the holidays, Jimmy O'Con ner, who attends, college at Cald well, is also home for Christmas MR. AND MRS. IRWIN ELLIS, Carolyn and Denny will go to Pasadena for the holidays with his parents, Mr, and Mrs. Gerney Ellis and Tom Ellis who attends college there. MR. AND MRS. RALPH WELCH are parents of a daugh ter, Julie Anne, born Dec. 17. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Welch of Langell Valley and Albert Saipens of Bonanza. Mrs. Kate Phillips,- of Grants. Pass Is the great-grandmother. MRS. HAROLD WILLIAMS and son 'Gary spent a few days at Chico and Corning with relatives and friends. MR. AND MRS. R. E. ASHER and children of Brooks. Alberta, Can., are spending the holidays with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Bud Stevenson and Mary Ann. They will go to San Francisco and Los Angeles to visit his relatives before returning home. Mr. and Mrs. Neal Ferguson, parents of Mrs. Stevenson, are here from Vinton, Calif., for the holidays also. Ing a stale-conlrollcd monopoly which, by its own admission and its own. recent actions, has for; years denied injured workers in! Oregon the quality of protection which they have a right to under the law." ' Lewis cime back, "A state agency belongs to the people, not merely the people's legislators who have an occupational axe to sharpen." Pearson said the address plates were used to mail a pamphlet "produced by a group of political labor leaders, officers of the Ore gon AFL-CIO, who have taken it upon themselves to distort the facts - about competitive work men's compensation. 'The commission s action raises the strong presumption that its members and staff are working against the three-way proposal which will improve the law for the benefit of injured workers in Oregon, if so, such conduct is an improper attempt by an agency of government to take over functions which belong to the legislature." Lewis retorted. Upon the ad vise of the assistant attorney gen eral assigned to the Industrial Accident Commission, the records were made available at cost to a responsible segment of organized labor. If the advice was wrong, Sen. Pearson should complain to the attorney general. In whose judgment he has demonstrated so recently such a great degree of blind faith. If the advice was right, Sen. Pearson has no justi fiable complaint. Sen. Robert Straub, state Dem ocratic chairman, said he wanted to make It clear that Pearson, president ot the last Senate, was not speaking for the Democratic Party. "The operations of the stale In dustrial Accident Commission arc an important and controversial area of stale affairs. Sen. Pear son as an insurance man and as one member of the state legisla ture is fully entitled to express his opinion on this subject. "Of course, since his term as president of the Senate is soon expiring, he does not claim to speak for the Democratic Party. It may very well be assumed that even the Republican state sdministra'jon will not support the extreme views on this subject urged by those Oregon employers who share Sen, Pearson s views. The final timber sale in Klam ath District, Rogue River Nation al Forest, for the year took place in the district office in the post office building Wednesday after noon. Kanna Brothers Logging Com pany of Klamath Falls offered the only bid $55,480 for timber in the Seldom Creek area, northeast of Lake of the Woods. The plot contains an estimated 1,600.000 board feet of Douglas fir, 500,000 board feet of pine species and 1,500.000 feet of white fir and other species. The minimum bid, as set by the forest service, was $22.05 for1 Douglas fir, $18.15 for pine and $7.40 for white fir. The company exceeaea uie minimum oiu a inue a by offering $18.20 for pine. A condition of the sale includes construction of 2.5 miles of road to forest service standards. The road will be open to public travel Thursday, December It, Its 'Happiest Boy Alive Says Young Minnesotan After Rocket Blast-Off CHINA LAKE, Calif. (AP) - "I'm the happiest boy alive," a young Minnesotan said after the successful firing of the homemade rocket he had sweated over for nearly five years. Experts call it the most com plex amateur missile ever built. It's the only one built by a layman ever fired from a U.S. naval base. A previous attempt to . launch it here fizzled last September be cause of the failure of a 10-cent connector. The Navy, more than mildly in terested, had 70 technicians get it ready for the launch Wednesday at this mountain-rimmed Naval when it is completed, and, under concept of multiple use manage ment, will open up some country for recreation, said District Ran ger Earl M. Karlinger. The road will also provide ac cess for firefighters and equip ment. THIEVERY HITS LOW NEWARK, N.J. (AP)-Thievery has reached a new low. Burglars stole $1,900 Tuesday night from the Salvation Army's northern New Jersey headquarters here. Police said the robbers broke in through a rear door and took the money. Ordnance Test Station on the Mo jave Desert, 136 miles northeast of Los Angeles. Marshall Kriesel, 20, the rug gedly handsome designer-builder, who has applied for, a patent on part of the guidance system, di rected the count-down from a con crete blockhouse 00 feet away. The 11-foot missile, five inches thick, was designed to go Hi miles high but ascended only about 2, 000 feet. Success anyway? Yes, say Navy scientists, despite a malfunction in the controlling fins up front. Robert Blaise, associate head of China Lake's missile propulsion division, said the rocket's liquid propulsion system worked excel lently. Said young Kriesel, "We've demonstrated some new princi ples." He'll spend the next 10 days of his Christmas vacation at the base, analyzing data from record ing devices including high-speed cameras whose film, slowed down, will stretch the seven-second flight into an hour. Kriesel is a t-foot-2, 190-pound, blue-eyed, brown - haired sopho more majoring in aeronautical engineering at the University of Minnesota. No movie concept of an anemic boy scientist, he has played football and basketball and is socially conscious he has a date with an officer's daughter booked for Monday.. tWWWMWWWWWWWWMSV OPEN TONIGHT UNTIL 9 P.M. Open Saturday Night until you leave! We'll be dated Sunday (Chrlitmai) and Monday, Dac. 26. NYBACK'S FLOWER FAIR 1614 So. 6th . TU 4-IIII MERRY CHRISTMAS S I X I X X M Insurance Agency and HAPPY NEW YEAR Jerry Thomas 3n Cfacs&im wty. '' CANDIES For each parson on your list, choose a box of famous Russell Stover Candies assortments of chocolates and home-fashioned favorites in colorful Christmas-decorated boxes, $1.40 one pound box. Other sizes from 70c to $6.75. asesatieTiai wtOMitriyaJ Haadqeartan Ft Year Dnsf, Needs Last Minute Shoppers Now At ACE TV 1140 Riverside The Fabulous Phonola 4-speed Portable Phonograph .1995 , . and rhe Pentron Hi-Fi Tape Recorder Madtl GR-1S 11095 atk with tO-Dev Unconditional Guarantee. ACE - TV 1140 Riverside Hey Santa! LOOK! Portable Typewriter The World's Finest ... pScc. 17(5)95 at only U U Including Federal Tax and Handy Carrying Case! Full 1-Year Factory Guarantee The perfect ejift for any or all members af the family. A bteete to ope rote, precision-built quality, handsoma colors, choica af type faces. The best buy anywhere! Open Tonight and Friday till 9:00 Last Minute Gift Suggestions . . . Brief Cases Card Playing Accessories Desk Lamps and Desk Sets Chess and other games Office Furniture Visit our new balcony gift shop for doiens of unusual gifts many , priced at only $1.00. QjOJIM' Office Supply 629 Main Ph. TU 2-4408 Just In ... H TIME For Christmas GIFTING! POLAROID LAND CAMERA KIT 10-Sec. Pictures Indoors Without Flashbulbs HERE'S WHAT YOU ill' THE FAMOUS POLAROID LAND CAMERA MODEL 800: the camera that gives you your picture on the spot in just 60 seconds and now makes indoor pictures at night without flashbulbs! THE REPEATING WINK-LIGHT: erases dark shadows automati cally with a wink of light. Winks 1000 times on a single battery and bulb, a saving of more than 100 in flashbulbs. a THE DELUXE FITTED case: made of beautiful saddle leather, holds the camera, wink-light and all accessories. jfin THE NEW I 1 EES I I POLAROID Electric Eye - Shutter Absolutely FREE With The Purchase Of The Above POLAROID LAND CAMERA KIT A 199.90 Value $ FOR ONLY CAMERA SHOP Phone TU 2-3331 836 Main