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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 30, 1960)
t Doy Should IEIave Chores ANN LANDEU Dear Ann Landers: A nicent column in which you enumerated thingi a 14-year-old girl should be doing around Um house was wonderful. It waa the first time I had seen anything specific on the subject. I happen to be the mother of sons and I would very much appreciate H if you would tell me what should be expected of a boy who is M years old. Many of my friends would also benefit since there seems to be a great deal of di vided opinion among the women In our group. Thank you in ad vance. ANOTHER DUMB MOTH ER Dear Mother! It's difficult to set down flat rales for all M-yeateM boys because some boys at 14 are more mature and stronger payu caBy ttiaa their peers. Generally speaking, by the time he's m Ugh school a bay should be responsible for some heavy chores such as upkeep of the law? end removal of snow from the walk. Running errands, carry. ing out the trash, and other odd Jobs, such aa fixing the fence or painting the garage should be his responsibUity. Helping with the dishes now and then (net every night, however) Is good training, and should not be tenildsred girl stuff. . . A 14-year-eld should be reeeiv. tag aa allowance and the chores and respoasibuitles should be tied in with H. No child should get aa allowance hut for kteathlag. If kMs get the idea early that there's some connection between work and reward, they wUl be less like ly to develop Into loafers. Dear Ann tenders: I've been married 13 years and have three lovely children. The trouble Is I'm overweight - and my husband makes my life miserable because of it He calls me a fat slob, a pig and many other names which are unprintable. I admit I'm fat but I'm not that hard to look at. He refuses to be seen in plubllc with me, which means I have to go everywhere alone or with friends. , My doctor says I eat because I am emotionally disturbed. The reason I'm emotionally disturbed is because my husband makes me feel like I'm nothing. Why should I deprive myself of good things to eet for him? If he loved me he'd overlook the bulges, Plenty of men love their fat wives, Am I rightT-PATSX t i Dear Patsy) If you really want ed your husband's approval you'd knock yourself out to get H. He's told you how he feels about your eieessive weight, but you'd rather eat taaa please him. gome men Just don't like fat women and you're married to one. Now stop making excuses tor yourself and get on n doctor. supervised diet. Not only will your husband like you better, but you'll like yourself better. , Dear Ann Landers: I Just read your column about Gamblers Anonymous. You listed chapter addresses and added "Las Vegas naturally." Why does everyone assume Las Vegas is made up strictly of slot-machines, crap ta bles, 21-glrls and roulette wheels? We vo lived in Las Vegas 20 years and have never gone near a gambling casino. There are many other happy and normal people who live quiet, useful lives in Las Vegas. We raise families, go to church and share a strong civ ic spirit. It's the vacationers who gamble here, not the local citi zens. You owe us an apology. SOLVENT CITIZEN Dear Solvent: I'll npologiie, nardner, but since cambliac Is dtys major Industry yen must admit M was a reasonable assumption. , Does almost everyone have a good time but you? If so, send for Ann Landers' booklet, "How To Be Well-Liked," enclosing with your request 20 cents in coin and a long, sell-addressed, sum pea envelope. (Ann Landers will be glad to help you with your problems. Send them to her in care ol this newspaper enclosing a stamped, self-addressed envelope. PACE t-h HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls. Ore. Friday, December te, MM Reports Some Growers Cheat SALEM (AP) - Hugh Taylor, chief of the Plant Industry Divi sion of the state Department of Agriculture, today said recent In spections indicate some potato growers are taking advantage of high prices and are not maintain ing quality. . In some instances, he said, pro ducers have failed to label the container or have labeled It false ly or the produce has not been inspected at all as required by state law. Taylor said producers are re quired by law to obtain state in spection before potatoes can be offered for sale. ; Theyll Do It Every Time By Jimmy Hatlo Horace hamm is we great lover of the SILVER SCREEN 'SO ROMANTIC--OW, SO GALLANT f EVES. VOUR LIPS-' Uf VT A RP All-TV DC SOU.. W. rv Kwssfll R.LoV -"l AWY CUT OUT TUE I DEAC- ST-I ( MUSK LAV OFF CANT But at home ask mis long' slippering , frau what HE IS TUAtft MtOAllPOP THE HtTIO MAT TO TED PLOHAS, zzz mis "'e-Kji CAUK Womon Waives Court Hearing A Klamath Falls woman waivei preliminary hearing in district court Wednesday and was bound over to the grand jury on a charge of knowingly uttering and publishing a forged bank check. Lola Alice Johnson, 31, also known as Lois E. Scott, Lois Johnson and Mrs. Otto Shepherd appeared before Judge Richard J. Burke accused of passing a worthless $43 check to The Cor ner Store, 636 Main Street, on Dec. 3. She was Jailed in lieu of $1,000 bail. NEWLY APPOINTED Ftra Defense Chief for Klamath County and Area Fire Defense Chief for Klamath, Lake and Harney counties is the Kingsley Field assistant fire chief, Fred Barmore, center. He is shown discussing Civil Defame plans with Joe Searles, f ' J!n Rymor" 1-oMarches, right. Barmore was appointed chief of fire services in the County Civil Defense orgeniiation and LaMerches an alternate. Appointments wore made under the Emergency Conflagration Act and Civil Defense Emergency Action Procedures for planning and coordinating activities of all disaster control agencies in the county. , BASIN BRIEFS Tuleloko MR. AND MR8. T H O R B E N REIBEN and their three chil dren, Judy, Billy and Ricky, were Christmas guests of Rcibcn s par ents, Mr. and Mrs. George Rei ben. Thorben Rcibcn Is in an ad. ministrative capacity with Boeing Aircraft of Seattle. I, HURRY, HURRY ENDS TONIGHT .ELVIS PRESLEY la Gl ILUES STARTS SATURDAY REAC3 CF EPIC C2ATKBS! At Mat I) F Ifl II mm MIM nWEI-sm njgaj.usi twfl I . kaltaa . m - unui It rx SJ. sr rx ; Z&PaV VENETIA STEVENSON JOHN MdrTflRE a WNNtaOAh.lNTSJNUTIOMl MOTUM i MIDNIGHT SHOW NEW YEAR'S EVE BOBHOPEOiyciOEfiAU- ...aaa a easam a aaa PANAMA fKAni MosucnH THE LMAjSgab! on Boimrm MR. AND MRS. JACK KELLY were hosts over Christmas to Mrs. Kelly's mother, Mrs. Ada Km- ; her brother, Owen Kruger, Grants Pass, and brothers and sisters-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Wil lis Kruger, Grants Pass; Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Kruger, Talent, and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Kruger, Mount Shasta. MRS. JIMMY SEATER and Mrs. Clara Seater, Ashland, were Christmas visitors at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Bob Seater and their family here. MRS. CHARLES PARTRIDGE and her mother, Mrs. Grace Bla- ser, spent Christmas Eve and Christmas Day at Tulelake with mends. MR. AND MRS. LEON ROB ERTS and their two children have returned to Bonanza after spending six months at Cheyenne, Wyo., with her parents. LARRY WOOLRIDGE, Bonanza High School senior, is spending the holidays with - relatives at Peels, Colorado. MR. AND MRS. BILL BUR NET and their family spent Christmas at Roseburg with her brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Cain. They also visited his parents, Mr. and Mrs. S. L, Burnett, Grants Pass. They were accompanied by Richard Burnett, a student at Shasta College, Red ding. MR. AND MRS. DICK PEP- PLE and their three daughters, Butte Falls, are spending the Christmas vacation here with Pepple's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Owen Pepple. MR. AND MRS. ORV1LLE DE VAUL are visiting their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and- Mrs. Paul Fitzhugh, and their sons in Washington for the holidays. MR. AND MRS. MIKE KETCH' UM were hosts during the' holi days to her brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Mo Cord, and their family of Santa Rosa; her brother-in-law and sis ter. Dr. and Mrs. Don Thomas, Willows: their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Art Mee ker and their son, Brett, and the Ketchums' son, Ronald Ketch urn, a student at Shasta College, Redding. MR. AND MRS. AL MASTON and their son Danny, La Feria, Tex., are visiting ber sister and brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Wil fred Noble, here. Their father, Will Rodgers, Tulelake, spent i few days with them. MR. AND MRS. LESTER LEA. VITT spent Christmas at Sacra. mento with their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Pete Hodges, and their children. Their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Silva. and the Silvas' son, came from Ferndale to visit. MR. AND MRS. GLENN HUFF. MAN and their sons spent Christ mas In Ashland with relatives and friends. Malln ' MERVYN WILDE visited his mother, Mrs. Vivian Murphy, in Bend recently. Mrs. Murphy has been 111, v MR. AND MRS. D. P. RED) were hosts over the holidays to their daughter, Mrs. Johnny Cho- tards, and her family of Mad ras. Their son, Roger, and his family of Bonanza also visited here. MRS. EMMALINE SHEPHERD and her son, Darrell, Portland, visited this week with her moth er, Mrs. Emma Wilson, here. MR. AND MRS. EDDIE PIERCE, Livermore, visited rel atives and friends here last week. He is a graduate of Malin High School. MR. AND MRS. LOUIS LYON recently returned from Portland where they spent some time vis itmg their daughter, Lynette, and her family. DON M1CKA. son of Mr. and OREGON NEWS ROUNDUP Men Wanted In Arizona Are Nabbed PORTLAND (AP) Two men wanted in Phoenix, Ariz., on a charge of flight to avoid prosecu tion on charges of murder and robbery, were arrested by FBI agents in Portland Thursday night. The FBI said that Charles Ed ward Hart, 21, and Carl Edward Davis, 2fi, surrendered quietly when tak?n into custody at a Portland boarding house. FBI agent Joseph E. Thornton said they are accused of the fatal beating of William Zorbas and the serious injury of Henry A. Craig in the course of robbery of a Phoenix bar last Sept. 28. Mrs. George Micka, is spending a 30-day leave from the Army with his parents here. He has been stationed in Augsburg, Ger many, where he will return by Jan. L MR. AND MRS. LARRY TANK. ERSLEY, Portland, are parents of a boy, named Ty, born Nov. 28. Maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Louis Lyon of Malin. MR. AND MRS. HERB STRUNK are hosts currently to Mrs. Strunk s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Hellenga, and her sister and brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Harry .Snyder, Three Oaks, Mich. The visitors drove to Chi' cago, then flew to Klamath Falls. MR. AND MRS. BILL OWENS JR. and their daughter, Corval lis, visited relatives here last week. ffS?Tnailiilitltaltiltlailtil.l.4f ttflllt!ilti!tal4f5SmViiT WINNER OF" V cfuW4BEST PICTURE"! prf nts AtsIttfriuCkritf i i U N t mm & if Wad ' circcteo ev WILLim WftSBt STARHINO CHARLTON HESTON JACK HAWKINS HAYft HARAREET STEPHEN BOYD HUGH GRIFFITH MARTHA SCOTT w,tn CAM ODONNFJl 'SAM JAFFE CUTCSP'l av MOBurro mt TCCHNICOLORo CAMERA 6S Afeht $1.4 (ImI. Ted OMroii (Uedtr 11) 7Js Seeline Aveilekle for All Nffe 2 Performance fleily Today $oK-$un..Mon. Oeon Oho U:H t it MRS. KATHY EDWARDS, home economics teacher at Ma lin High School, visited her son, Tom, and his family in Paso Ro bles during the Christmas vacation. MR. AND MRS. DEAN GEIST and their son, Harold, Eugene, spent last week visiting the George Smalleys here. Geist is a student at the University of Ore gon. He is majoring in business and personnel. MR. AND MRS. EARL WIL SON entertained their daughter, Rox Ann, an elementary school teacher in Bend, and Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Vaughn here recently. Mrs. Vaushn is teaching in a Pleasant Hill elementary school. MR. AND MRS. A. J. PRES- COTT are vacationing in Balboa, Calif. MR. AND MRS. RON STEVENS and their daughter, Kim Marie, Hcrmiston, have been visiting Mrs. Stevens' parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Micka, and other relatives here. Stevens is assist ant varsity coach at the high school there. MR. AND MRS. ALLEN LOM MASSON and their family of Wal la Walla have been visiting Mrs. Lommnsson's sister and family, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Pope, here, and Mr. and Mrs. John Madden of Klamath Falls. Lommasson is Mrs. Madden's brother. Churches Crusade PORTLAND (AP) The Port land Council of Churches is ask ing church members to sign a covenant aimed at eliminating racial discrimination in housing. The covenant says in part: "I believe in the right of every per son to live in a home and a neigh borhood of his ow n choice. I here by bear witness that I am ready to welcome into my neighborhood residents of good character, re gardless of race, creed or na tional origin." The covenant is being circula ted in some 35 Portland churches of various denunciations in a pi lot program. . A committee of the council will meet soon to map plans for ex panding the program. Bu'lding Planned PORTLAND (AP) Plans for a 2'A million dollar office build ing in downtown Portland were announced Thursday by the Port land Federal Savings and Loan Association. The six-story structure will be located at SW Fifth Ave. and Washington St., on the site of the Perkins Hotel. Construction is scheduled to begin next fall af ter the hotel is razed. office on Tuesday. Mrs. Neuberger was elected in November to ' succeed her hus band, Sen. Richard Neubercer. who died in March from a cere bral hemorrhage. Maurine En Route PORTLAND (AP) - Sen. Mau rine Neuberger (D-Ore), first woman senator from the Far West, is en route to Washington, D.C., by train today to take over her new job. She was accompanied by her cat, Muffet. Before leaving Thursday, Mrs. Neuberger said she will arrive in Washington on New Year's Day and will take the oath cf "33P 3 iS O r. SIGN Or THE TLMES CHARLOTTE, N. C. (AP)-A sign in front of a new medical clinic building here reads: "Go to rear of building for accidents and parking." OFFICE MACHINE REPAIRS TrpwrlUn, Ailing Ms ckiats clniitl, rtplrli rerhtaUd. Gaenateal Warkaiaaiaip JONES' Office Supply rhn TU t-IMS W nil t O SeUrar VOV!VhatANevYear's Celebration With CHARLEY RYAN America's Top Western Recording Star Here's The Formula For Your "Biggest Evening" 1. Champagne Sapper. The beat feed between an Fraaclica a a i Portland. Fleer Shew 'and Dane lnc III a.m. . . . Charlejr Bran's Rhythnu. Sylrailer Slarp'e lanjr ehow. I. MldnlrM Frelle with all , the neltemakera and fun far 'CI. 4. Mernlnf Breakfast Dance ateant a ri and wenderfal anatie antil :M a.m. . Telephone Now For Reservations WH 7-2155 HUNTER'S LODGE Loke County's Fun Place To Go . . . Jutt S MIbiim N.tlh l LUitI.w Hlwr IX I Meet Mercury Meteor the new and KMmtni Ftlll. Orta Svrvlnfl SouftMrn Ortfw and North CtllfArnta Publlihtd 4Hy ductal st.) and Sunday nv lautnarn Owon PuBtiihinf Company Main a? Kipianadt Phona TUwade Mill W. S. SWEETLAND. Publlthar Cnttrtd aa itcond claw mitltf at lha eaal afttt at Klamam Pain. Oraoorv. an Auauit N. IfM. vnatr act of Con- oraaa. Mirth x sconduu post- it patd at Klamam Fans. OrtooA. sod tt additional malllna ottKat. SUSSCniPTION KATIS Carrltr I Month t Months 1 Voar Mall in Advanca 1 Month Months I voir Carrlar ant Ooalorl Witkdav a. Sunday. UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATED PRESS audit bureau op circulation Sueocrlbara not roclvlno Ofllvory at r Htrald ani Namrs. Ploost phono . sio.jo , WI.OS . I I fl . ticn . IllOt its better low-price 1961 MERCURY METfOK S0O mmr aBa kHMHBkn kB MM HIOHLIOHTa BBttBVBBBBBaBBBaBnaBai MEKCIJRY M3TE0R... Priced to compete with the low-price field NEW NAMEI 2 ALl-NEW SERIES) NEW SUPER-ECONOMY "4" AND V-i INOINESI AR IOWE PRICES I o This year, with the Meteor 600 and 800 series, Mercury has 2 full series of low-price cars. Price start hundreds of dollars below last year, o Optional equipment and transportation cost far leas too. FUll SIZEI o There's more interior comfort than in last year's Mercury. Outside' dimensions are trimmer for easier parking and garaging. PAR MORE VAIUE THAN OTHER LOW-PRICE CARS, a Mercurys are heavier (starting at 3708 lbs., curb weight) have a longer wheelbase (120 inches), o First with Cushion-Link suspension (absorbs small bumps you still feel in other '. cars), o More self-servicing features than any other low-price careverything from a self-lubricating chassis to self-cleaning spark plugs. Why not get more, save more?Just see your Mercury dealer, iincoin mercury division $fetcT& OCirthwr-lM MOSnlMn il Mctaiv. on on Mer SOO'i, Momtr.rt, flnd Mrcir Pohon vegom. 19l MERCURY PRICE COMPARISON CHART 1. Mtacuir MITIOI too 1. miscury MITIOR SOO 1. MIRCURY MONTH IY Ptloid ttkl la Iks hstrt ic ti omotts mm lt fmut noil hiwiom ta knf MK. tee win low sim tin. M slI.IMI Hirntyt. ASK YOUR MERCURY DEALER AtOUT HIS NEW EXTENDED WARRANTY ON ALL 1MI MODELS i JOE FISHER, INC. 677 So. 7th it. a Carcntr. rirculatian TUW Mill Mtaro I rj.