Obnoxious Boy
Not Really Best
By ANN LANDERS
Dear Ann Landers: I am boy
12 years old and I am having
trouble with my personality, i
j nave leeiing
uiai i am on
l. 1 T I i
ter than most
people and I'm
getting a rep
utation for be
4 ing conceited.
The big
VsC problem Is
really AM better and I have
proved it. My grades are tops
and Im outstanding In sports.
I've been playing the piano with'
out much effort since I was six
years old. And as if this isn't
enough, I m good-looking besides,
What can I do? I think I'm
' getting obnoxious. SEARCHING
FOR HELP
Dear Searching: Thank you for
the most unusual letter la a long
time. I will do my best to make
you less obnoxious.
First: Looks are aa accident
of birth. You are aot entitled to
any credit for the way the good
Lord put you together.
Second: Musical taleit. If
you've been playing the piano
since you were six years old, you
are gifted. This Is another en
dowment for which you can't
take credit
Third: Top grades and athletic
ability took some effort ea your
part. Congratulations. But keep
in mind that so matter how hand'
some and accomplished you are
somewhere there Is someone who
la lust as handsome and ac-
com pushed, and not conceited,
i which makes him a lot better
than you la Important ways.
Beet
Dear Ann Landers: My husband
and I are planning a 10-day va
cation with our son and daughter-
in-law They were married 18
months ago an,d this is our first
: visit. We want to do the right
thing. .
Our son has a good-paying Job
but we know they are having
financial struggle. My husband
feels we should pay part of the
grocery bill when we are guests
. in their borne. I'm uncomfortable
.bout this and think perhaps they
nugni oe insuitea. aiso, snouia i
l.L It- - I l I
. neip wiui un iwuHwoni nu
cooking? Please eiva us some
advice. We are eager to be
GOOD IN-LAWS ' . .
' Dear Good: Deal offer to pay
u. ml tmm kill mm 1.
day Visit. II yea stayed three
. months H might be different. Yea
. coaM slop at we marsM, mw
: aver, aad pick ap fear choice
' Steaks and a eoaplo at
AM WOflM DO DOT MP M
, THEM out to dinner one night
! Guests always keep their nam
nOCDcSjJl
-Td-T. IJ j
ILVIS PRESIIY in Gl HUES
STARTS SATURDAY
RfACHIKS
KITH HEIGHT:
OF EPIC
KEATKESS!
1
I COLOR
my
"V VENETiA STEVENSON V
r.f JOHN MclNTIRE S -sT
MIDNIGHT SHOW
NEW YEAR'S EVE
BOB HoPEOiyClliC fiAU-
la order aad are careful aot to
make extra work for the host
ess. As for helping with the cook-
lag aad bouse cleaning It depends
oa the daughter-in-law. Some ap
preciate the lift, others resent It.
Ask.
Dear Ann Landers: This Is for
the woman whose husband Is con
siderate, loving, a wonderful fa
ther and loyal companion, but a
man who "never quite made it
financially.
My husband is a big success if
you look at his bank account, my
clothes closet, our club member
ships, and the cars in our drive
way. But to me he's a failure. He
wants no responsibility as a fa
ther or husband. When I ask for
his advice, he says, "You've got
plenty of money. Do as you
please."
His business associates and our
social friends would be shocked if
they knew how little he cared
about his family and home. I
hope all successful men aren't
like this but Im terribly sus
picious. Some of my women
friends have the same sad look I
have and they never say any
thing either.. - EXECUTIVE'S
WIFE
Dear Wife: Your husband
sounds like a platinum-plated ego
maniac. These birds require spe
cial treatment. Have you tried
your darndestT
T lanrH ih hnnhv.trann of
teenage drinking, write for ANN
LANDERS' booklet, "Teenage
Drinklne ." enclosing! with your re
quest 20 cents in coin and a
ions, self-addressed, stamped en
velope.
(Ann TjinHcra will ha clad to
help you with your problems.
Send them to her in care of this
newspaper enclosing a stamped,
self-addressed envelope.
DIG EATERS
WASHINGTON (AP) If you
were an average American you
consumed an estimated 1,488
pounds of food this year.
The Agriculture Department to
day broke that down this way:
414 pounds ol dairy products,
except butter.
408 pounds of fruits and vege
tables.
108 pounds of potatoes.
178 pounds of meat, fish and
poultry.
140 pounds ot Hour and cereal.
108 pounds of sugar and syrup.
7- pounds of butter, fata and
out.. ' - i ' '
41 pounds of eggs
17 1 pounds of coffee, tea and
cocoa, j '
V HURRY, HURRY
ENDS FRIDAY NT
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THE
Ho-Hum . . ,
Think Machines May Make
White Collar
BERKELEY (UPI) t- The only!
humans in offices may some day
be men who oil thinking machines
according to a University of Cali
fornia researcher. ;
Dr. Edward A. Feigenbaum
said Tuesday that electronic
brains may some day make the
big decisions of business, Even
high-level management will be re
placed by machines, he predicted,
Feigenbaum is now engaged in
a research course called simula
tion of human learning and think
ing processes in a computer."
There is an underlying set ot
human mental processes which
OSCAR NISSIN
Oscar Nissen
Will Retire,
Move To Madras
Oscar Nissen, who has oper
ated a massage and therapeutic
gymnastic center in Klamath
Falls most of 20 years, retired
last week and plans to move to
Madras where he owns a home.
Nissen said he did hot sell his
business and will take his equip
ment with him. He had been in
the business for 42 years.
Nissen Is the son of the late
Dr. Hartvig Nissen, a native of
Norway, who Introduced his mas
sage and exercises in Washington,
D.C., in 1883. Among his patients
were Gen. Ulysses S. Grant and
other distinguished men.
He wrote a book, Practical
Massage and Exercises," that be
came a standard manual in the
field. . ;.'
The younger Nissen attended
Posse Nissen School of Physical
Education established by his fa
ther on the East Coast. He spent
some time in military service
during World War I, and from
1919 until 1929 was instructor and
director of the massage depart
ment of Boston City Hospital.
He then went to Saint Peters
burg, Fla., then to Medford, Ba
kcrsficld, Los Angeles and finally,
Klamath Falls. At Los Angeles,
Nissen spent six years as physi
cal trainer for all athletes of Los
Angeles City College.
When he arrived here, Nissen
operated a hot springs health re
sort. During World War II, he
worked as a physical therapist
In Kaiser Hospital, Richmond.
During the years Nissen has
spent in Oregon, he homestead-
ed property between Prineville
and Burns. He sold the farm
five years ago.
Nissen said he plans to work
part time at his business at Mad
ras.
.He has held offices of various
capacity in the Klamath Falls
American Legion. He is a mem
ber of 40 and 8.
ITI Ift ITS Sit Jl IT! StI tn Tfl ST! SIS
I; flH
11 ACADEMY AWARDS
iohdinf"BEST
;reeenle 1
yfV AT.leofth.CW VW
WLUANmSK
CHARLTON HESTONrJACK HAWKINS
HAYA HARAREET STEPHEN BOYD
' HIGH GRIFFITH MARTHA SCOTT-'. CATHY ODONNELL-SAM JAFFE
Tonight at 7:30
lex Office OpM 4)30
2 Performances Daily
FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY MONDAY
1:30 and 7:30
Admission: Adult 1.49 - Undtr 11 75c
Men Oilers
people leain and solve. problems,1
he said. "We want to duplicate
these processes in computing ma
chines (that) think in much the
same way as an intelligent human
being does."
He said auch machines will be
able to do anything humans can
do in nonmobile jobs.
Dr. Feigenbaum said machines
would replace executives but "I
doubt they will ever replace
skilled craftsmen who have to
move about the job1 and use their
hands to hold tools and perform
delicate operations.
He admitted he may be working
himself out of a job. "There ap
pears every likelihood that intel
ligent machines can carry on in
telligent teaching," he said.
FB Membership
Is Necessary
In Market Group
LA REVIEW Membership in
the Farm Bureau will be required
of farmers who want to partici
pate in benefits of the Marketing
Association, including wool and
lamb pools, according to a deci
sion made by the Lake County
Farm Bureau Marketing Associa
tion board, of directors Tuesday
night.
Board members staled their
reasons for taking this action is
that Farm Bureau members pro
vided finances and effort to es
tablish the Marketing Association
and have fostered its develop
ment to date. They said they
feel that membership in and sup
port of the parent organization
benefit the individual as well as
the total agriculture of the coun
ty. ,
The board went on record in
favor of requiring lamb pool con
signors to commit their lambs
definitely to the pool before the
marketing program begins.
This is the same art currently
required of wool pool consignors.
This will give the pool buyer
a reasonably accurate estimate of
total lambs available for market
and will enable him to do a bet
ter job of selling the lambs, say
board members.
Other business included a re
port by secretary-treasurer, Eva
Manning, that the wool pool sold
$28,000 worth of farm flock wool.
This represented tome 8,900
fleeces. The price was $48.15
per hundredweight, the best re
ceived in this area last year.
Wool grower members, of the
association board estimate, that
this was 12 to 15 cents per pound
more money than could be rea
lized if pool members were to
market their wool individually.
Based on an eight-pound aver
age fleece, the wool pool means
an estimated $9,000 to $10,000
more wool money for farm flock
growers.
W. D. Augustine
Takes Training
LAKEVIEW - Aviation Officer
Candidate William D. Augustine,
son of Mr. and Mrs. William B
Augustine of 434 S. H St., is
undergoing pre-flight training at
the Naval Air Station, Fensacola
Fla.
During the 18 weeks of train
ing students are instructed in
aviation science, navigation, prin
ciplea of flight, and other tech
nical courses to prepare them
for their future roles as naval
aviators. ,
Upon completion of prc-fllght,
students undergo primary flight
training at Saufley Field Naval
Auxiliary Air'Statlon near Fensa
cola.
!l Ifl ITt ITI ITI STI STinfltftlfttltlfftnt
PICTURE"!
-By CLAY
23
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To dovelop message for Friday,
nod wofdi corresponding to nimbers
AHC SO
or your loaioc oinn sign.
AH II
2 You
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4 EndMVWS
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I iri MAY II
J Advene
Tally-Hoooooo!
MARYVILLE, Tenn. (UPI)-A
dedicated coon hunter plunging
through the woods on a winter
night ignores everything but the
music of his hounds on the trail.
Bill Everett, 45, of Maryville,
Tenn., is such a coon hunter. But
his enthus'asm for the sport took
a stiff beating early Tuesday.
I was chasing after the dogs
and never did see a coon or any
thing," Everett said. "The next
thing I knew I took a step and
it sure seemed like a long time
before I hit the ground."
Everett had stepped off a 400-
foot cliff overlooking Calderwood
Writer Charges Rigging
In Participation Show
HOLLYWOOD (AP) - A free
lance writer charges in a national
magazine article that there were
at least 40 rigged episodes on the
television show "It Could Be
You" between 1956 and 1958. He
says he rigged them.
Ralph Edwards, who owns the
show, immediately denied knowl
edge of any such improprieties.
So did the National Broadcasting
Co.
'Al Blake, 73, wrote In Confiden
tial magazine that he supplied
people to play parts on the day
time show, which appears five
times a week on NBC.
"It Could Be You" is an audi
ence participation show in which
stones involving members ot ine
audience.' are unfolded. The sub
jects are( then brought on stage
ana given surprises.
Blake, said he rehearsed his
landlady, his newsboy and friends
and acquaintances for roles on
the program.
He said members of Edwards'
staff, including producer Stefan
Hatos. knew of the alleged rig
ging. He did not say Edwards was
aware of it.
Edwards said he has affidavits
from Hatos and his present staff
'denying that they were in any
Truman Writes
New Textbook
NEW YORK (AP) - Former
President Harry S. Truman says
he is writing a textbook about the
president's role in government.
Truman told a meeting of the
Society of Archivists Wednesday
that he is writing a schoolbook
but added wryly: "It may never
come out. He did not elaborate.
The society made Truman an
honorary life member and gave
him an award for his interest in
preserving official documents.
BAN "GO CARTS"
BIRMINGHAM. Ala. (UPD-Po-
lice in suburban Homcwood an
nounced today they will prosecute
any youths who drive gasoline-
powered "go carts" on public
streets.
School principal John R. Slaugh
ter received a fractured skull
Tuesday when he was hit from
behind by one of the low-slung
cars powered by a lawn mower
engine. A 15-year-old girl was
driving it.
matter off I
FACT 1
When James Denver killed
a man in a vicious rifle duel,
he could not have foreseen that
it would someday cost him a
chance to become president.
Many years later, he was a
popular choice as the Demo
cratic nominee. But when Re
publicans circulated the story
ot the duel the Democrats
turned to Grover Cleveland,
who then won the election.
e Encyclopedia Brltinnlca
X. POLLAN-
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ocr.
130-32 40-51 dll
(67-73-85-88 "tl
SI Coorjarolron
Kosrio
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63 And
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66 St
67 Something
68 AM
69 Mot
70 From
71 Mok.
OCT. 24 fJi
NOV. 22
II
l-27.29-J3.fi
43-71
USITTAIIUS
NOV.
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3-10-12.:
73 About
74 5uccu
75 Go-Biwent
76 Agrotmtnls
7711
78 Open
79 Hidden
50 Wait
51 Hoppy
82 To
83 Certain
84 You
85 Strained
86 Eventt
87 Clouiee
88 Finances
89 Awhile
Li I -40. 75
CAPSICOtN
DEC. JJ f
JAN. 20 v4A
7- iyfA
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90 People
-I7.25.49an
84
Lake In the Great Smoky Moun
tains of East Tennessee.
Luckily for Everett, it wasn't a
vertical drop.' He tumbled "roll
ing and falling" the first 400 feet,
bounced another ISO feet to a sec
ond cliff on the edge of the lake
and was stopped by a tree. Fel
low hunters had to call a rescue
squad to bring a boat beneath
Everett's position so that , he
could be lowered into it they
couldn't pull him back up the
cliff.
He was released from the hos
pital after treatment for cuts and
bruises.
way in collusion with Blake.?
"Never did he at any time state
to staff members that he .was
manufacturing the situations as
he states in the article," Edwards
said.
Edwards said Blake, was never
a member of the show's staff and
never wrote for it. The staff got
information from many sources,
Edwards said, and Blake was one
of them.
In August 1958, Edwards said,
'we suspected the facts in one
of his (Blake's) contributions and
discontinued accepting material
from him."
Blake acknowledged in his story
that he was annoyed at the Ed
wards organization because it did
not pay him what he thought he
had coming for contributions to
the show.
OSC Receives
$200,000 Grant
CORVALLIS (AP) - Oregon
State College announced today re
ceipt of a $200,000 grant from the
National Science Foundation to
begin construction of a giant elec
tronic computer and a computer
research center.
It will take at least three years
and a total of $500,000 to finish
the computer, which will be the
equivalent of commercial compu
ters costing upwards of $10 mil
lion, said Dr. A. T. Lenseth, head
of the Mathematics Department.
MUM ON PRODUCTION
TOKYO (UPI) Communist
China today remained silent about
the achievement of its 1960 pro
duction targets and there was
speculation that the plans had fal
len short of fulfillment.
The New China News Agency
broadcast year-end reports on in
dustry and mining, but they con
centrated on preparations for the
1961 plans.
The 750-mile-long island of Cuba
was discovered by Christopher
Columbus, just two weeks after
he first sighted land in the New
World.
YOY! What
Celebration
With
CHARLEY
RYAN
America's
Top Western
Recording Star
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HUNTER'S LODGE
Lake County's Fun Place To Go . . .
Jut S Mlailei Kerlh el LiktiUw ea Ulr IM
PAGE t-A
HERALD AND
Appling Is Opposed To Abolition
Of Board Under Hatfield Program
SALEM (AP) - Secretary ofi
State Howell Appling Jr. said Wed
nesday he Is opposed to the aboli
tion of the Board of Control as the
supervising body for state insti
tutions. This was recommended in
the reorganization plan of Gov.
Mark O. Hatfield.
"I am very much in agreement
and support of what Gov. Hatfield
is trying to do fundamentally,"
Appling said. Appling, Hatfield
and state Treasurer Howard Bel-
ton make up the Board of Control.
Appling, originally appointed by
Hatfield, said if the function as
a member of the board is taken
away from the secretary of state,
he would urge the post be ap
pointive.
"I. would hasten to add that I
entered state government not as
a professional politician but as a
professional tax payer," Appling
said. "I didn't come here to per
petuate a job."
Appling said he would be de
lighted to see the position of sec
retary of state abolished if it were
shown to be no longer necessary,
Appling said abolition of the
board and assignment of its tasks
to a department under the gover
nor would increase neither its ef
fectiveness nor its efficiency.
He said the secretary of state
and the treasurer have more time
to devote to state institutions than
the governor.
A three-man board has experi
ence and background that the gov
ernor alone would not have, he
said.'
Appling said Belton has legis
lative, farm and financial experi
ence, the governor has education-
New Church
Gives Call
For Pastor
Klamath Falls newly organized
Victory Temple has called the
Rev. Suas H. Jones as pastor.
The Rev. and Mrs. Jones, former
residents of Klamath Falls, with
their sons, Robert H., 17, and
Gary Lynn,t 5, will be present
lor ine sunaay, jan. i, serv
ices at 11 am. and 7:30 p.m.
The Rev. . Jones has been in
full-time ministry for .15 years
following graduation from Beta-
any Bible College, Santaj Cruz.
He has traveled extensively as
an evangelist. His former pas
torates have been in Johnson
City, Tenn., Knoxville, Tenn., and
in Klamath Falls.
Services will be in Victory Tem
ple. 1909 Homedale Road, be
tween Shasta Way and South
Sixth Street. An invitation and
welcome is extended to all in
terested persons.
Luncheon Held
For Mrs. Lowell
A no-host luncheon and mis
cellaneous shower was held Wed
nesday at the Willard Hotel for
Mrs. Frank (Dorothy) Lowell,
who learned early Christmas
morning that the family trailer
home in Postville, Iowa, had
burned. The mobile home and all
its contents were completely de
stroyed.
Mrs. Lowell was in Klamath
Falls to visit a son. Dean Low
ell, and a daughter ' and son-
in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Hoet-
ler. Her husband is spending the
holidays in San Francisco with a
second son, Dr. Ronald Lowell
and Mr. Lowell's mother, Mrs.
Matilda Lowell.
Mr. and Mrs. Lowell, well-
known in business and political
circles here, left Klamath Falls
three years ago to make their
home in Iowa.
A New Year's
3EU
Your "Biggest Evening"
I. Midnight rroUe with all
tha naUrmaktra an
(an tar 'fl.
4. Marninf Rruk f itt
Pane aleak A rra
and underfill tnaaic
Mil VAt ft.m.
i JW-S -eJ
NEWS, Klamath Falls, Ora.
al and public administrative ex
perience and he has a background
of engineering and business ad
ministration.
Appling said that he also Is op
posed to putting the institutions
in various departments as pro
posed by the governor, but he said
this should be considered entirely
apart from the question of keep
ing the Board of Control.
"My opinion after two years on
the Board of Control working with
institutions is that the institu
tions should be in a Department
of Institutions," Appling said.
He said he felt the job of sec
retary of the Board of Control
should be upgraded to director ot
Government Seeks Cash
Saved By Model Convict
nfw YORK (UPI) The feder
al government today sought to
obtain the $1,348 saved by a
model prisoner" who worked for
$35 a month in the penitentiary
and went without cigarettes or
candy so he could have money
when he was released.
Ramon Rosario, who served
nine and a half years in Leaven
worth Penitentiary, Kan.', on a
narcotics, conviction, ironically
had socked the money away in
U.S. savings bonds.
Rosario had been sentenced in
New York in 1951 to 15 years in
prison and fined $11,000 for sell
ing and possessing narcotics.
Shortly after he was jailed, the
government seized his assets on
a tax lien, leaving him virtually
penniless.
Becomes Model Prisoner
Rosario became a model pris
oner. He worked in the peniten
tiary shoe factory and was paid
$35 a month.
To provide for the day when he
would get out, he started invest
ing almost $15 a month of his
pay in U.S. savings bonds, de
priving himself of most of the
things he could buy in the prison
Landmark Burns
At River Town
EUGENE (AP) - A large bund
ing housing the Jasper Lumber
Co. store, a landmark in the
riverbank community of Jasper
since 1912, and the post office next
door were destroyed by fire Wed
nesday. . . ,
Little was saved from the hard-
ware-lumber sales firm. Postmis
tress Mrs. Fred Bauer rescued
the mail and records from the
small post office building.
"It was all afire and we got
here lust in time to save the ad
jacent buildings," said Jake
Smith, warden for the Eastern
Lane Fire Protective Assn.
The store owner, Clarence Kizer,
said it would probably cost be
tween $17,000 and $18,000 to re
place the building. The inventory
was about $13,000, he said. Kizer
said he had some insurance, but
not enough to fully cover the. loss.
Jasper is a little community on
the banks of the Willamette River,
12 miles southeast of Eugene.
FOR FOLKS WHO GET IN
TOO DEEP AT CHRISTMAS!
You can float through Christmas without
care in the world, when you belong to U. S. .
National's Christmas Savings Club. While
others run up bills you prepay your expenses
with cash! To join, you merely make a pain
less weekly deposit-as little as 50c, if yoj
like. For more Christmas fun in .'61, join
U. S. National's Christmas Savings Club
starting now! ,
WtESIT mm'
aouiiw
. i .50 I i 2i
1.00 50
2.00 100 m
50O25O
1000 1 500
Pint Intaratt
Thariday, December 88, ltfta
institutions under the supervision
of the Board of Control.
"I feel that the agencies have
more in common with each other
than with the departments to
which they would be assigned,"
he said, referring to the gover
nor's proposal. The governor
would put the deaf and blind
schools in the Department of Ed
ucation and correctional institu
tions in a Department of Publia
Safety.
Appling said money Invested in
strengthening the Board of Con
trol staff for better institutional
coordination could be returned 10
fold through greater efficiency
and economy.
commissary,
such
cigarettes
and candy.
Rosario, now (X) years old, was
ordered released a month ago
with time off from his sentence
for good behavior and another
year off for working in the pris
on shoeshop.
He knew, however, he could not
pay the $11,000 fine still standing
against him, so he served an
other 30 days in jail to qualify
for a pauper s oath.
Demands Bond Money
But when he appeared last
Thursday to take the oath, Asst.
U:S. Atty. Stanley Schlessingcr
demanded that Rosario's bonds
be turned over to the govern
ment.
Rosario refused and was re
turned to the Federal .House of
Detention here. A Legal Aid So
ciety attorney, Barnard Moldow,
heard of the ex-convict's plight,
however, and obtained Rosario's
release in time for Christmas by
handing over $1,348 from the
cashed-in bonds to be held in es
crow until the case is decided.
'He could have spent the mon
ey or sent it home," Moldow
said. "Instead he chose to buy
government savings bonds and ha
should be allowed to keep them.
He served his time in good faith."
Rosario has 60 davs to file a
suit against the government's
claim on his mdney. If he fails
to file, the money automatically
will be applied toward his fine.
ITANDaao
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Rentals and Sales
In The Village Court
rii I Main Ph. TU 2-347S