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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 12, 1961)
"T T Egotist IHTuhby Is Very Rude FA mm. By ANN LANDEM . Dear Ann Landers: My husband b a well dancer and he sure does know it. Whenever we are out on a party or with. crowd he asks me to dance and the minute ha snntfi a bet. L V : ' ter dancer on i-V?, the floor he 2Sk grabs her and throws me at her partner. This has happened w many times it's beginning tb irritate me beyond endurance. I've told him it's not only insulting to me but there is always the possibility that the girl he grabs may prefer the guy she's dancing with. He says I'm overly touchy and that no girl has ever complained. I told him I was writing to you and he said you'll surely see the humor In the situation and tell me I'm wrong. Am 1? NO EX' PERT Dear No: This is about as fun ny a lour-alarm fire In a home (or the aged. Your husband's be- havior Is unspeakably rude he must have a colossal ego to assume that every woman he ea- counter would rather dance with Um thai anyone else. Tell him if he pulls this stunt agala you will walk off the floor and leave him to battle It with (lie man whose partner he tries to snatch. Dear Ann Landers: I am a fel low 19 and In love with a girl who is afraid of all men. Her father beats her and uses bad language. He also hits his wife and alans the other kids. I want to marry this girl and take her out of that terrible home but she says she doesn't trust me and that I will probably treat her like her father treats her mother. I've always been kind to this girl and I've never hit a woman In my life. What can I do to get her to marry me? She is of le gal age and could leave whenever she wants to.-IN LOVE - Dear la Love: This girl's home ettaatioa has twisted her thiakiaf ad 1 da' think yea eaa easily aatwtat B. i The normal reactloa a nor mal girl wmM be to leave a aanhhlag sHaatiea at the earliest possible minute. Mace she cheeses to stay at bora aad get belted anaad I aoa't this yea sbeaM try to talk her late aurriag rind a aew girl. (P.B. She'll probaM raa off - 1L. M4 a a a. -I ' WN HPB I1TM BUT VfaW aMtai her around like Dear Of Dad.) PANAMA & FRANK THE p 7 Slacked & v & COLORSCOPI l- "HALF tMT" Dear Ann Landers: Is there anything wrong with an 18-year-old boy phoning a girl, 16, at 4 o'clock in the morning? Our daughter has been going steady with kick ana tney see each other every day, even If only for a minute. Rick works nights and our daughter is high school. We have a phone with a long cord in the upstairs hall. 0 u daughter often takes the phone into her room and closes the door. Then If she gets a call no one else In the house is disturbed. This morning she was giggling about the fact that Rick h a phoned her at 4 a.m. just for kicks. I thought it was rather cute but her father blew his top. Is there anything wrong with this?-NOT SURE Dear Not: - There's' a time and a place tor everything. Four o'clock la the morning Is not the time for a social call. It may not be "wrong" but It adds up to pretty poor judgment. Does almost everyone have good time but you? If so, send for Ann Landers' booklet, "How To Be Well-Liked," enclosing with vour request 20 cents in coin and a long, self-addressed, stamped envelope. Ann Landers wui De giaa 10 help you with ' your problems. Send them to her in care of this newspaper enclosing a stamped, self-addressed envelope. Fire Expert Testifies In Portland PORTLAND (AP) - Inflam- mable liquid had been poured in three places in a house that burned here Oct. 6, killing four persons, a fire investigator testi fied Wednesday. The testimony was given by Lt. Glenn C. Richards of the Port land Fire Department at the trial of Mrs. Joseph Garrett, 33, on a charge of first degree murder. She Is accused of setting the fire that kUled three of her four children and their governess. Mrs, Garrett and the other child were rescued by neighbors. Mrs. Garrett attorneys have entered picas of innocent and innocent because of insanity. Lt. Richards brought into court floor boards from the burned house. He said they showed that the five had spread rapidly and that charring had occurred under the boards, Indicating that an in flammable fluid had run down there. . Defense attorney Earl F. Ber nard said earlier that Mrs. Gar rett had been using cleaning fluid on the furniture in the living and that she had left a candle on a table as a welcome to her husband. The state con tends that Mrs. Garrett set fire to the house after she had quar reled with her husband and he had left home. Church Women Hold Workday MALIN The Women's Associ ation held a work-day meeting Thursday, Jan. II, at Malin Pres byterian Church. Devotions were led by Bessie Reid. . ' . Elva Smalley presided over the business meeting. The members decided to completely remodel the nursery in the Sunday School rooms and to increase the goals this year on present work, "op portunity gifts and missions. Chairman of overseas sewing, Gertrude Johnson, asked for sew. ing to be completed for shipping in April. . There will be a fellowship pot- luck dinner Feb. 18 at the church. Installation of officers will be held Jan. 19, with Mrs. J. Walter Browning conducting the Install tag. Members present were Helen Loosley, Martha Pokorny, Mildred Micka, Dorothy Haley, Leah Street, Gertrude Johnson, Hulda Smith, Muriel Brown, Gladys Raj- nus, Carolyn Whitman, Marie Bunnell, Iva Jane Wills, Bess Ann Smith and Elva Smalley. MORE OPEN LONDON (UPI) - A news and cigarette stand undergoing re modeling, posted this sign on its front door: More open than usual." Theyll Do It Ever yHatlo 1 y Time .i . By Jimm :f;. ;-' 4, THE ones ,y I've had it: y tub one op aw-"" -. THAT AREN'T V. TWEM AND THEIR AtMjOGA KISSINS 1 Xuii ucu r"4 UPSIDE DOWN U SLIDES.' LETS J? THE BLARNEY STONE 1 JUrrzZ? j shoulo be-and t suoe outa were a he swoweo mead J a 1 STlT WS i that wasn't y bepobe iwev up- like she A i CLi?2 V ROTTERDAM". TROT OUT THElB VJ WAS BITING V wST, " WAS ,H i j . WOODtN shoes M Plaster, ofp WORWNG-NOW MERES l COPENHAGEN.' C. THE CEILING.' AOl ji9yjmsi.. iP I Looking at the world ' VjwKC5 STXfl W HivVH FROM A11- AN6LES ATA r. tfJnl I ' f vJa1"'1 ' PAL'S aoaM- P'DGET- ylkW K 9,tT5r.JL?il A AvJiTN&- Thanh auo a utvo mat tip to 'V !aikr J yfml h V tSr 'fe JEOOVamj BRAD KELLY, Qo VVTjsvJ NIA ff K LITTL6 OOCKIN', f Mi.Vfnu,..K.JJIQ '' BC0PIN6 Bl06E,CONM. Two Men Sought By Portland Police For Quizzing In Peyton Murder Case Dr. Adams To Be Last In Office Dr. J. Martin Adams will be Klamath' County's last coroner as a result of a new policy handed down by the state medical exam iner, Dr. William L. Lidbeck of Salem. Dr. Adams, elected to a four- year term in 1959, will serve un til January, 1963, when the coron er's duties will be assumed by the county health officer. The Klam ath County health officer is pres ently Dr. Seth Kerron. ' "This will mean more work for my office," Dr. Kerron said. "The reason coroners are being abol ished is that most counties named an undertaker to the coroner po sitionand then one undertaker got all the business." Dr. Kerron said Klamath County didn't have this problem, but still came un der the ruling. The coroner is responsible for conducting autopsies and deter mining causes of death. ''AMLO .HlJlvaBskND.iaWI. Klamath Falls, Ore. Thursday, jaauary U, 111 PORTLAND (AP) - Police are seeking two men for question ing in the slaying of a coed and her boy friend in, November. One is a sailor missing from his station near Astoria since Nov. 27. The other is a paroled convict believed to have suffered bullet wound about that time. There was no apparent link be tween the men and the slaying of Beverly Ann Allan, 19, Washing ton State University student from Port Townsend, Wash., and Larry Ralph Peyton, 19, Portland. But police, looking for any clues in the case, disclosed they are In terested in anyone who dropped from sight after the Nov. 27 slay ing. Peyton and Miss Allan appar ently were ambushed in a wooded Hospitals' Exemption Questioned By Roberts SALEM (AP) - Carlisle B. Roberts, chief of the legal sec tion of the Oregon Tax Commis sion, said Wednesday the law leaves some doubt about exempt ing hospitals from property taxes. Roberts said that the law de fines property and specifics what is exempt. But in the law, lie said, it exempts property of lit erary, benevolent, charitable and scientific institutions "exclusive ly used" for charitable uses. Roberts said hospitals are charitable institutions but court rulings have held they also can be run for profit. Under the law an exempt hos pllal Is one that never 'denies admission to anyone for lack of funds, he said. All, he added, swear they admit everybody ex cept for a few private hospitals which say otherwise. Robert said the Oregon Sit- California Briefs ItIM MR. AND MRS. JERRV AVEN are parents of a son, born Dec. 29, weighing 7 'lbs., 2 ots. at Scott Valley Clinic. v MR. AND MRS. ROBERT BEN JAMIN of Anderson are parents of a daughter named Tamara Rose born at Scott Valley Clinic here weighing 8 lbs., 7 ozs. Jan preme Court has held that hos pitals are charitable as long as they are run on a non-profit basis and accept non-paying pa tients and also accept others on the basis of what they can pay, The Shriners Hospital for crip pled children In Portland, he said, Is a clear case of a chari table organization. It is a clear case where every patient benefits," he said., "They pay nothing and are not even ad mitted unless it is shown they can pay nothing. If we could keep them as pure as that we would have no problem, he said. Yet we have hospitals on the rolls that have not taken a charitable case in l: years." ' Charles Mack, chairman of the Tax Commission,' said that the question must be decided in each individual county. . ' The question was raised Tues day when Harold Domogalla, Marion County assessor, said he had some doubts about wehther Salem Memorial and Salem Gen eral Hospitals qualify as tax- exempt institutions. Domogalla said the hospitals will have a chance to present their cases before any decision is made. MR. AND MRS. FRANK MOR RIS are parents of a boy, named Frank Vernal, born at Scott Val ley Clinic Jan. S, weighing 8 lbs., 6 ozs. MR. AND MRS. ARTHUR VET- TKR have a new daughlor, She was born Jan. 7 at Scott Valley Clinic weighing 6 lbs., 3 ozs. Her name is Marilyn Jean. EDWARD LATCHKM, Grouse Creek; and Ernest Haydcn, Cal lahan, attended a meeting in Yre- ka Sunday of Siskiyou County Miners' Association. FRANK EAMS and Franklin Maplcsden drove to Chico Satur day to attend a meeting of the Methodist Men's annual Christian Venture. lover's lane near Portland early on Nov. 27. Peyton was found dead in his car there the next day. He had been stabbed to death Miss Allan was carded off. Her body was found three days ago in a ravine beside the Sunset High way 40 miles west of Portland. She had been strangled. Peyton's car had a bullet hole in the windshield but neither Pey ton nor Miss Allen had suffered a bullet wound. ' Police recalled that a paroled convict, picked up after a false fire alarm in Portland Dec. 9, had a bullet wound in his arm. He said he suffered it when he went target shooting with a friend. He W'as beins held for a lie detector test the next day, but was turned over to the custody of a man wno said he was his parole officer. Police said thev later learned the man was not a pa- re officer. He also is being sought. The 'sailor, was stationed at Tongue Point on the Columbia! River near Astoria. He had a pass for leave on Nov. 26 and 27. He last was seen at the naval station gate about noon Nov. 27, when he asked a warrant officer for a ride. The warrant officer said he gave the sailor the ride, lettine him out about 12 miles east of Tongue Point. The sailor said he was to meet friends to go duck hunting. Naval officers said the sailor left behind his automobile,, about $2,000 in payroll savings, and a pistol. List 158 Births In Lake County LA KEVIEW Figures compiled in the County Health Department show that there were 158 births in Lake County during 1960 and 54 deaths. The 1959 figures were 159 births and 61 deaths. In the office of county clerk it was reported there were 29 mar riages during the past year and 22 divorces. Postmaster Fred Peat issued a statement that gross postal re ceipts for 1960 were $62,554 which showed an increase of $851 over the $81,702 for 1959. The total for money orders Is sued in 1960 dropped $30,760 in a comparison of $255,131 against $285,891 of the previous year. The money order fees were $3,275 in 1960 as against $3,664 1 in 1959. Stamp cancellations showed an increase of 5,863 in the I 1960 figure of 892.190 compared with the 886,327 of 1959. Two Are Booked On Local Counts A young man from Malin, Carl Bradley McCollough, 22, was ar rested Wednesday by sheriff's dep uties and charged with obtaining money and property by false pretenses. McCollough was charged in a warrant issued by the district at torney with cashing a worthless $15 check Jan. 2 at Hendricks and Hodge Shell Service, Spring and Esplanade streets. A 21-year-old Lakeview man, James Gordon Poole, was booked at the county jail to begin serv ing a 90-day sentence for fur nishing liquor to a minor. Poole was also ordered to pay a $300 fine by Lake County Magistrate O. C. Gibbs. SATELLITE SCHEDULE Bv THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The balloon satellite Echo, still orbiting over the Earth, can be seen over Oregon in. the early morning this week, weather per mitting. These figures wore given by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. They are for Salem, but vary only slightly north and south. ' Jan. 13, 4:15 a.m., south of city. 44 degrees above horizon, moving northeast, Jan, 13, 6:20 a.m., north, 87 de grees, northeast. Jan. 14, 5:44 a.m., south, 86 de grees, northeast. Jan. 15, 5:07 a m., south, 79 de grees, northeast. Jan. 16. 4:31 a.m., south, 72 de grees, northeast. Jan. 16, 6:35 a.m., north, 78 de grees, northeast. Jan. 17, 5:59 a.m., north. 80 de grees, northeast. RED FOSTER ARRIVES MOSCOW (UPI) - Veteran American Communist Leader Wil liam Z. Fostei arrived here Wed nesday for medical treatment he said he could not afford in the United States. Foster, "chairman emeritus" of the U.S. Communist party, faces trial before a federal court but was granted permission to come here for treatment. He was met at the airport by Presidium mem ber Otto Kuusinen. Local Man Ends Carrier Cruise Richard E. Mousseau, machin ist's mate fireman, USN, son of Mr. and Mrs. Roy J. Mousseau of 227 North Ninth Street, returned to Long Beach, Calif., Dec. 18, aboard the anti-submarine war fare support aircraft carrier USS Hornet following a seven-month cruise with the Seventh Fleet in the Western Pacific. One of fhe Top 5 Leading Brands of Fine Watches I CHOICE OF STYLES FOR LADIES' 17-Jewcl AT CO SO NWWVW SMART NEW LADIES AND MEN AT59 MAN'S 17-Jeweli AT 49 75 24" IS88 LOW EASY TERMS LOW EASY TERMS 2 LADIES: R'f. 11 ..VI l?-Jerl . Mr I. 19.3I) 17-JiwH . ..... KC. S.M 17-Jewrl MEN'S! K'f II i ll-Jtwrl Bff. tiM I7-Jwfl ... R. M.M l?-Jtwl Btf. 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