Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, January 02, 1961, Page 2, Image 2

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    MM I
AND NEWS.
Oldest Fan Mail
Is Hear teiiing
' ' Br ANN LANDERS
Dear Readers: Recently I be
son ipsi-ch for my oldest fan
Vh warch U over and Uie
- .- j mail has been
IT heart warm'
ins. l wouia
like to share it
with you.
Dear Ann:
am 01 and
read you daily
in the Chicago
Sun-Times. If there' a prlie con.
necled with this contest please
aend It but 1 don't want any pub
licity. I am courting a woman
who Is 68. She thinks I am 79,
Thank you.
Dear Ann: I live In Erie, N.D.,
and read your advice In the Far
es Forum. I was 06 June sin. reo-
pie sure 'do net different today.
MAGGIE MCLEOD ,
Dear Ann: My name la Lulu
Hunter and I'll soon by 07. When
I was ' young we didn't have
these problems you write about
In the Los Angeles Examiner. We
stayed home and obeyed our par
nts. ,,
Dear Mrs. Landers: I am S6
and read your articles twice a
day. We get the Detroit Free
Pref.8 In the morning and the
Grand Rapids Press at night.
You are a kind friend to all.
ADELAIDE RANDALL
Dear Annie: I was 06 en Sep
tember 2$. Your column In the
Columbia (Mo.) Tribune proves
i there are a lot of foolish people
In this world. I farm every day.
tending my soy beans. My daugh
ter says "Slow down. Pop" but I
say a person must keep busy to
stay out of devilment EDWARD
EASLEY SR.
Dear Mrs. Landers: I am
George Schmidt of Hoven, S.D.,
and I read you in the Aberdeen
American. I'm 07 and I don't feel
ft.
Dear Ann: I was 07 on July 31
and read your advice In the Port'
land (Ore.! Journal. I like the
way you set people back on their
heels. They need it. WILL Go-
BACK
Dear Ann: Tve read your col
umn from the first day it ap
KSTOTCieST
tftsu Aovsnesi
TaiaT5TCitttiHIia. ,
I U lj, 1 M,Tt,." SUNDAY 4V MONDAY
HUM -III IM I . wmi ftftuctftaw MNrtroa-
COLOR I MOT-MlMi-traS.M-MttWU.aM
Tha Entertdnmtnt Experience
of a Ufetimt!
TICKETS ON SAlf NOW FOR ALL PERFORMANCES
BEST PICTURE
mn wrtr kst Manor -kst supfonTiin actor-
Ktr tmmutmmtr (m tin mt MticTiwr (.,)
kst nut omM" "mst mem trficTS" -mst sound"
- tat cmtwbt (fit) -out music scour
2 PERFORMANCES TODAY
1:30.7:30
. Down Of 1 2:30-4:30
' A4 1.4 mL Ti) Chilton 7Sc (Under 11)
One NrferineMO
- '.- 't'i ii Toe. Wed. Then. M.
Meadajr, Jeeuaiy t, 1MI I,
Klamath Fall, Orrgoa .
peared In the Minneapolis Trib-
une. I ll be B7 soon. Am I your
oldest? - ROLF JACOBSEN
Dear Mrs. Landers: I read you
in the Champaign Urbana Cour
icr. I'm 08 and drive my. own
car. I got my first license at 72
and they give me a new test ev
cry three years. I haven't
flunked yet. I was in trio aairy
business for many years and on
ioved it. When glass bottles first
came out my customers wouldn't
on far such new-tangled things.
They said milk in a pail' was
fresher. Times have sure
changed. Goodbye now. H. M,
CORRAY
Dear Ann Landers: I see by
the Corvallis, Ore., Gazelle-Times
that you aro looking for your old'
est reader. Muybe I'm the one
I am 07, born July 30, 1863. 1
live at the Masonic and Eastern
Star home In Forest Grove.
MRS. E. U WATERMAN
Dear Ann Landers: I was
on Christmas aay, i reaa we
Bible every day and Ann Lan-
ders column. My paper is the
Cleveland Press. MRS. A. B.
WHIPPLE
Dear Ann Landers: I am
and read you in the Seattle Post.
Intelligencer. I scan the headlines
glance at Uie editorials then go
right to your column. I never
find any advice there for myself
because I don't have any prob-lems.-ISAAC
NEWTON BAKER
.Dear Ann Landers: I will be
101 In February. I am grateful
that I still have my eyes and
that my mind is clear. The Mar
km. Ohio, Star is my paper and
I like your column. Picas don't
print my name. This letter is for
you alone. -
I wrote t her as follows:
Dear' Friend: Please give me
nennlsslea to print your same.
Yea are my oldest reader. Please,
please pleasel-ANN LANDERS
She replied:
Dear Abb Laaders: Ge ahead
nut print It, my dear. I am Mrs.
I. W. Wheeler t 111 Mala Street,
Card log to, Ohio.
To learn how to keep your boy
friend In line without losing him,
send for ANN LANDERS' booklet.
"Necking and Petting And How
OF THE YEAR!"
4aaw 1 TCT. si
1961 Will Not Be So 'Merrie' In Great Britain
By DICK GROWALD
LONDON (UPD-Tliere will be
new Great Britain In 1961, but
perhaps not quite so "ncrrie" a
one as In lfWO.
Big Drop In Farm Income
Didn't Come About In '60
By BERNARD BRENNER '
WASHINGTON (UPK-The na
lion's farmers fn low smashed
all previous production records,
and surpluses of wheal ana corn
piled higher and higher in gov
ernment bins.
For consumers, the rising vol
urn of farm production and a
slight drop in average larm
prices helped offset some of the
effect of Another round of small
increases In food marketing costs.
Agriculture Department reports
showed retail food prices from
July through September wore up
about I per cent over the same
period in 1959.
Experts who had predicted
farm Income would tumble again
in '60. following a 15 per cent
drop in 1959, were fooled. Parm
prices for the first nine months
of 1960 were I per cent below
1959, and the gap was narrowing
in the final months of the year.
Net farm income for 1960 was
expected to be eqiinl to or slightly
above the fll.S billion of 1959.
with little change forecast for
1961.
Net farm income In 1953. first
of (he Eisenhower administration
years, was $13.9 billion.
Agriculture Department esti
mates for 1960 indicate crop pro
duction will be up about 2 5 per
cent from 1959 and livestock pro
duction down about 1 per cent.
Far To Go," enclosing with your
request 20 cents in coin and a
long, self-addressed, stamped en
velope. (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.)
Bigger Steel
Market Seen
For West Mills
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)-Pres-
ident J. D. McCall of U.S. Steel's
Columbia-Geneva Division pre
dicted Wednesday increased or
ders for products of western steel
mills by at least the second quar
ter of 1961.
' In a year-end statement, he cit
ed expansion plans of the compa
ny . to meet the anticipated
demands.
"Wostcrn construction activity
is expected to continue at a high
rate with a resulting strong de
mand for steel," he said.
Expansion plans for Columbia-
Geneva include the following:
A continuous heat treatment
line at the Pittsburg works.
A new coal drying plant now
in operation at Wellington, Utah.
A new raw materials research
laboratory-ncaring completion at
Geneva works near Provo, Utah.
-Rebuilding of the No. 1 blast
furnace at Geneva works enlarg
ing It to more than 1,500 tons
per day.
Construction worn on a new
iron min near Lander, Wyo., to
provide an Important additional
source of ore.
A fourth reheat furnace in the
Geneva rolling mills.
A scheduled start in 1961 on
a new installation at tne rrovo,
Utah, plant for a temper mill for
hot rolled coils of steel.
Small Village
Is Angry Over
Deaths In Fire
NOYAN. Oue. (AP)-Thls tinv
Quebec village was both sad and
angry today about the fire that
killed Mrs. Abel Vosburgh and 11
of her IS children.
A brother of the dead woman
said the family lived in the wood
shack built by the father "because
no one would rent him a house
with all those children."
"Everyone has lost someone,"
said Die Rev, William Sellwood as
he went around this vilUge ot 500
near the Vermont border spread
ing the news of Thursday s early
morning tragedy.
In a closely knit community
like this, there are very few folk
who are not related," he ex
plained.
Pushing out of the ashes of the
one-story shack were the frames
of the four beds in which the vic
tims were trapped. Six bodies
were found in one bed,
vosburgh was the only survivor
of the tin that killed his U year
old wife and 11 children 6 months
to 19 years old. Two of their other
children are married and the oth
er two were aay. '
CAT GETS CHARGED
CLEVELAND. Tenn. (AP -
(Mrs. V. L. Stark reported hear
ini a funnv noise under th hmvt
of their new car. Stark, deciding
tne car needed its 5,000-mile
chcckuD anvwav. look It In the
local dealer from whom he pur-
cbased it.
The noise: A kitten oerched
In I960 the did Britain gave
independence to the richest treas
ures of her once-upon-a-time
African empire. In l'JCl the new
Britain, her leaders say. must
Overall, -farm.' output will be up
to a new record, about zo per
cent above the volume farmers
turned out only a decade ago.
The big crops in lOfiO, harvest'
ed from a steadily shrinking nunv
ber of farms, again boosted the
government's investment In ur-
pluses piled up under price sup-
port programs.
In mid-summer the Agriculture
Department owned or had made
loans on 18.8 billion worth of
crops that nobody else wanted
to buy at the moment. By next
summer, tills total is expected to
be somewhere between $9.S-$10
billion, largely because of a
steady increase In surpluses of
wheat and corn. .. . .
Cotton surpluses, which have
been dropping since 1056, shrank
1 '
again in 1960. By next summer,
the cotton carry-over will be
down Mow 7 million bales 4ess
than half the amount on hand in
1956. But the wheat stockpile by
next summer will be up to 15
billion bushels, more than enough
to meet all domestic and export
demand for a year even if farm
era destroyed the entire 1961 crop.
The corn suplus, boosted by an
all-time record harvest of nearly
4.4 billion bushels in 10, will be
up in '61 to about 1 billion bush
els.
Agriculture Secretary Ezra T.
Benson, winding up eight years
in one of the cabinet's hottest
seats, tried again in 1960 to per
suade the Democratic Congress to
solve the wheat surplus problem
his way by granting authority
for lower support prices and re
laxing or eliminating federal pro
duction controls. But Democrats
who favor higher supports and
tighter controls rejected Benson's
proposals again. The result was
another deadlock and no action.
Sources close to President-elect
lohn F. Kennedy have indicated
that one of his early moves in
1961 will be aimed at getting new
legislation to curb the wheat
surplus. Kennedy was elected on
a platform pledging the new ad
ministration to boost farm in
come and to favor cutbacks in
production when farmers them
selves are willing to accept stiffer
controls. ,
With Congress and the Eisen
hower administration in complete
disagreement on most farm is
suesand with many city law
makers unwilling , to back new
farm legislation Congress in
i960 produced few major new
farm laws.
Among the more Important
new bills were measures stabil
izing tobacco s u p p o r t prices
which had been climbing under
an old law, and raising dary sup
port prices lor the period end
ing next March 31. A bill tem
porarily extending the federal
sugar control program and au
thorizing a ban on imports from
Cuba was approved last summer.
but action on a long-range exten
sion of the Sugar Act was de
layed until 1961.
Jkjf ft k ' a MM
USB!
Big Savings on our Famous Brands!
Pricts . ., . AT BOGATAY'S!
FOR WOMEN
VALUES TO 19.95
4) Jhnn Neturallurt
life Striae Jerce
Peradit Kittens
FOR MEN
.VALUES TO 19.99
Roblce Pedwin
617
MAIN
develop the ability to lead a Com
monwealth in which men of dark
er skin noid tne overwhelming
majority vote.
In 1060 the old Britain perhaps
had tlie richest year of her world
trading history. In 1961, accord
ing to Prime Minister Harold
Macmillan. the new Britain will
be imperiled unless she can ex
pand her trade 'far beyond the
. i i-
currem level.
In 1960 a commoner, Antony
Armstrong-Jones married royal
ly, Princess Margaret. In 1961 the
new Britain, if Tony has his re
ported way, will have a "work
ing" member of the royal fam
ily. In I960 the old Britain wit
nessed the disappearance of hun
dreds of fish-and-chips shops. In
1981, according to government 'es-
timates, the number of neon-lit,
chromium-plated hamburger bars
in Britain will double into the
thousands.
In 1960 the old Britain gave
her militant trade unions a con
tinued wave of pay-raise agree
ments. In 1961, according to trade
union and party leaders, the -La
wu' nav unaergo
Inn fit lha lauoMtl inlpoiHiMl
I n :u . ,
battles in its history-to rebuild, a
national might which a fight over
unilateral disarmament cracked.
v aw ivi voi uiit aiiiui mi
In 1960 the old Britain gave
mora Britons . more automobiles
than ever before. But the dawn of
1961 saw British auto production
cut In half as markets petered
out.
In 1960 Soviet Premier Nikita
S. Khrushchev publicly ques
tioned whether Great Britain de
served to be called "great." In
Start 'Em Right In '61 Yi
MedO'Bel
. FC3 CC3D
T" ' I .
NATURE'S OWN VITAMINS
y .-. ; : ; ' ' '
Energ rich-, . extra fresW 'oner lip mockin'
good! That's our pure, wholesome Medo-Bel
milk packed full of natural vitamins, miner
als, proteins. Drink a quart a day for better
health!
From Your Grocer er Route Man
AAEDO-BEL
ALL-JERSEY
Dairy Products
101 Klamath Ave.
, Mll.nk I ",H,U .UL
mm V 4M M ft I ft t V S.
V-- "v-,? Vt
Top
(Q) to
47
Shop Now & Save!!
QtjATAY':
1961 Macmillan must meet, de
mands from both the political
left and right to assert Britain's
former independent power - in
world affairs.
In 1960 the rate of British cot-
fee consumption pushed ahead of
tea drinking progress. In 1961 new
Britain, so say the Saville Row
stylists, will . witness the once
bowler-hatted gentleman wearing
some of the tightest trousers ever
form-lilted, -for man.
In I960 Macmillan and Labor
Party leader Hugh Gaitskcll made
fond farewell speeches to Brit
ain's well-known friend. President
Eisenhower. In 1961 both Macmil
lan and Gaitskell will be trying
to establish friendship with ' a
president with whom they've nev'
er eaten breakfast. '
In " I960 the old Britain wit
nessed the rise of a European
Common Market which did not
include her. In 1961 the new Brit
ain, according to her worried
economists,' will have to decide
whether trade preference should
still be g'ven to -Commonwealth
countries instead of to Britain's
continental neighbors.
. .OFFICE MACHINE -
REPAIRS
Trpfjwrllt'rm, AtMUg Mt.
cfciaM Utata, rMlrf.
varhtalta.
0rai1 WrkatMfcl
JONES' Office Supply
ID t-lliS
W. ull lr a SiUiar
asAirm
Ph. TU 2-4606
Quality or Clearanco
I fi B II II j I. I
VCp" II 11 II Ivi I
FOR TEENS
VALUES TO 11.99
Flats . . . Sports
Mtrk Antele Gltmeur Db
Jeyce Petiei
FOR CHILDREN
VALUES-TO 9.99
Butter Brown
90
617
MAIN
January Clearance
STARTS TUESDAY MORNING AT 9:30
Regular
U.95
Regular.
. 13.M
Regular
if 93
Regular
22.95
Regular
24.95
;'; "Our famous moke wool jerseys, wools,
silks, knits, taffetgs. Many styles. Sizes 7
thru 20. You'll hove to hurry to get the
best!
Women's
Suits
Values to 39.95 -
25.00
Famous make tailored and
dressy suits . in wools,
crepes, flannels. Solids and
ptaids.
Velvet
Skirts
reg. 13.98
7.00
All sizes in o fine selection
of dressy velvets. You'll
have to hurry for these.
Ladies1
Coats
reg. 29.95
19.00
Fomous name all-weather
coats in assorted styles and
fabric.-
Hand
Bags
reg. 2.98
1.99
Assorted styles in leathers,
patents and fabric
Capri
Pants
reg. 3.98 to 15.98
1.98-10.66
Sove one-third on theie
fomous nome capri's in
ossorted styles and colors.
All sizes.
Baby
Dolls
reg. 3.98
2.49
Worm flannel poiomot in
florols and po i teli, Clote
out price t, ' so hurry. -
Quilted
Robes
reg. 13.98
9.00
Cottons ond nylons in flor
als ond pastels. Sizes 10
to 20.
500 Main Street
Cotton
Blouses
reg. to 7.98
3.00
A fine selection of famous
nan-it blouses in many,
styles and colors. .
Corduroy
Skirts
7.98 5.30 ;e299s8.S0
Mostly . solid colors taken
from . regular stock. All
sizes, but hurry!
Nylon
Hose
reg. to 1.65
88 c
Our fomous brand. s Foil
and winter shodes. All
sizes, so stock up now.
Ladies'
Gloves
reg. 5.98
3.65
Leather. Lined with fur or
- flannel. All colors, all
sizes.
Wool
Gloves
reg. to 2.25
1.00
Assorted styles In most all
colors. Real sovingi, so
hurry.
Ladies'
T-Shirts
reg. to 3.98
1.49
Son one-half on these fo
mous brand shirts. Many
styles in oil colors. All
S'zes.
Scramble
Table
reg. to 5.98
2.49
Save mee thon cne-holf
on odds ond ends ot bros,
s'lps, etc.
Wool
Skirts
reg. 16.98
8.50
Our famous all - wool
bronds now reduced to
half price for quick clear
once. Ladies'
Coats
reg. 25 95
17.00
All weather styles in as
sorted fabrics and stylet.
Hurry for these.
Bra
Closeout
,e9- 1 lO ,e9
3.W
3.95
5.95
Strapless and reg u I o f
styles. Sizes 32-38, ABC.
Cotton
Pj's
reg. 3.98
2.49
Beautifully figured pajam
os in assorted colors. Only
a few left, so hurry.
Nylon
Gowns
reg. 8.95
5.99
Lang or woltz length.
Beautiful pastels In sizes
32-42.
Bulky
Sweaters
reg. 12.98
8.00
famous name all wool
bulky-knits n many colors.
Broken sizes.
Jeweled
Sweaters
reg. 13.98
7.00
Orion sweaters set with
am stones or pearls. Reol
beauties ot reol savings.
atop the battery. .