Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, February 05, 1961, Page 2, Image 2

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    t (
Entertain Boy
In Living Room
By ANN LANDERS I
Dear Ann Landers: I there
anything wrong with a respect
able, decent 16-year-old girl en-1
tertainine her boy friend in her
bedroom with.
the door clos
ed?
I've gone
steady with
.Orrin for over
a ver. so it
,Cl. ,D 7 . ' .. ....
isn i jb ii
. J hardly know
each other. The reason I'm writ
ing this letter is because my fa
ther complains about us closing
the door. I've told him a mil
lion times that we close the door
(and sometimes lock ill because
. my bratty little sisters keep barg
ing in.
Don't vou think a girl Is en-i
titled to 6ome privacy in her
own home? My dad says he will
listen to you. Please bo on my
side. Ann. ELOISE
Dear Eloise: I AM on your side
and that's why I am telling you
to entertain your boy' friend in
the living room.
It's up to your parents to keep
the younger kids out of your hair
when you have guests. You have
a right to Insist on It. On THIS
I'll back you all the way.
Dear Ann Landers: My sister
was invited to a rather fancy
party last week and she asked
if she could borrow my mink
stole. I said yes.
A few days later my husband
and I attended a dinner party;
and I wore my stole. A friend
of mine said "I see you and
Muriel have stoics exactly alike."
I didn't set her straight because
I didn't feel It was necessary to
go into detail.
My husband' overheard her re
mark and he knew at once that
I had let Muriel wear my stole.
I hadn't mentioned it to him be
cause it didn't seem important.
He was furious and asked me
never to lend my stole to Muriel
again. He doesn't have anything
against her but he can't stand
her husband.
Do you feel a husband has the
right to ask his wife not to lend
her clothes? I think this Is petty
but I will do as you say. UN
SELFISH '
Dear Unselfish: Most husbands
couldn't care less whether or not
their wives lend their clothes.
But since your husband has made
it clear that he DOES care, you
should respect his wlsh,
Dear Ann Landers: I want to'
invite my boy friend to iur home
for dinner in a lew weeks. It
will be his 18th birthday and I
thought I'd bake a cake. The
only thing holding me back is I
am ashamed of his table man
ners.
Butch makes a lot of noise
when he eats, and he talks with
food in his mouth. He also holds
the silverware in an odd way,
puts his elbows on the table and
mops the plate with his bread.
My parents are pretty strict
about manners and I'm afraid
they'll turn thumbs down on
Butch after watching him eat
one meal. This hardly seems
fair, but that's the way they are.
I like Butch a lot. He's a swell
guy and is about the best-heart
ed fellow I've ever met. I've kid
ded him about his table man
ners but he doesn't seem to take
the hint. What shall I do? -
JULIA
Dear Julia: If you care for
the boy you can do him a favor.
Stop kidding and tell him In plain
English that he ought to do some
thing about his table manners
and then be specific and tell
him what he Is doing wrong, and
how to Improve.
Poor table manners can be a
lifelong handicap. If he's the
right kind of fellow he'll appreci
ate your Interest.
PAGE t-A
HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls, Oregon
Sunday, PenAiiryTS," 19BT! " "J
n i V 'I n i r '
". . 'tv'X 'AS Xa n
A RED HOT PLANNING TEAM of Oregon Technical Institute alumni gathered re.
cently for their first session. The plans are so sizzling, say alumni, that Wayne O'N'ale,
back, center, had to stand at the ready with fans. Th planners are, from left, John
Newman, Clyde "Hap" Caldwell, O'Neals, Herman Gumbert, Frank Stanko and
Anna Marie Eck. As a mere sampl of things to come the committee is announcing
plans for a potluck dinner soon.
Economic Impact Of Cos Pipeline
Outlined By Official Of Company
The effect of the Alberta-Cali
fornia natural gas pipeline proj
ect on the economy of the na
tion, the states, and the commu
nities affected was outlined brief
ly here Friday by Gene Kret
schmar, Klamath Falls office
manager for Western Pipeline,
Inc. Krelschmar spoke at the
luncheon meeting of the Klam
ath Falls Rotary Club.
The pipeline, which is being; border.
Company has been authorized to Klamath Falls will continue to, companies
import from Canada an average
daily volume of 418 million cubic
feet and a maximum daily vol
ume of 456 million cubic feet.
This will be the source of gas BIG INDUSTRY
serve as a source ot supply and During 1960, the industry had
distribution for the company, untjer construction or contracted
even as they move northward to g (ota, of 18 370 mies of
completion of the project. lament of near.
distributed in the Klamath Falls,
area. PGT will deliver an aver
age of 415 million cubic feet a
day to Pacific Gas and Electric
Company at the California-Oregon
WEEKLY LEGISLATIVE ROUNDUP.
Confidential to SAND IN MY
SHOES: You mean Rocks In
Your Head. The girl Is too
young for marriage. Docs she
have parents? Do they know
about you?
Legislative Leaders Expect Short
Session; Two Obstacles Lie Ahead
5 T?
CURT JURGENS
GENEVIEVE PAGE
C(mV MU01tliAST(WHKIM
m ftCOflHHlNIU WITIIIUTtHfl, WC
CincmaScopEm CQtOft -
loo V; C4
RAY it
SEARS J
Accused Men
Enter Pleas .
To Charges
Two men entered pleas to
charges against them Friday in
circuit court and a third man saw
a new charge filed against him
and an old one dropped.
Paul Alban, 38, Portland, plead
ed not guilty to the charge of
obtaining money and property by
false pretensos. Judge David R.
Vandcnberg set Feb. 14 as trial
date and had previously appoint
ed liobcrt. Kerr as counsel. Al
ban is accused of paying for gro
ceries with a forged check.
Lonny R. Polk, 17, Route
Klamath Falls, pleaded guilty to
charge of larceny of an auto.
The youth admitted stealing a
car from Drive More Used Cars,
302 East Main Street, on Jan.
14 and driving it to Corning in
the company of another local
juvenile. Polk will be sentenced
Monduy morning.
The original bad- check charge
against the accused "Kobin
Hood" bad check passer, Arthur;
John Ward, was dropped by the
district attorney Friday and a
new charge' filed in its place.
Ward, 40, 014 Pine Street, is now
charged with passing a worthless
$15 check to Your Store, 721 Main
Street, on Dec. 3. The old charge
involved a check written tp Mill
er's Department Store, 512 Main
Street.
Ward allegedly told invest igat-
ing officers that he placed the
spoils Unit ho bought on the door
steps of needy-looking homes and
kept the money he obtained.
By PAUL W. HARVEY JR. Inor said the commission failed loi
SALEM (AP) After four adopt a plan to distribute surplus
weeks of the session, legis- foods to the needy. The Senate1
latlve leaders are confident they I will act early next week on a res
might finish their work In lOOiolulion directing the commission
days or lcvi. If they do, that
would be 15 days sooner than it
took in 1959.
Legislative committees, which
have hearings going full blast, are
much further along than usual.
But several big obstacles lie
ahead, the largest being taxation
and reorganization.
Several key Senate leaders fa
vor income tax reduction. Ine
House management opposes it. So
that probably means the legisla
ture won't pass any major tax
legislation at all. I
The House Taxation Committee i
is going ahead with its proposals
to levy a 3-ccnt cigarette tax,
make a corresponding reduction
In Income tax rates, levy a gross
Income tax of one per cent, and
eliminate all Income tax dedue
lions. The effect of this would be
only to shift the tax burden a lit
tle bit. It would raise the same
amount of money as present tax
laws.
If this program Is passed by
the House, it probably would die
in the Senate Taxation Commit
Ice. And If the Senate votes fori
tax reduction, that would die in
the House Taxation Committee.
As to Gov, Mark 0. Hatfield1
reorganization plan, many hear
ings will have to be held before
there can be any committee ac
tion. And there is a growing be
lief that it Is too complicated for
one legislature to handle.
Right now, the most pressing
matter Is what to do about Gov,
Hatfield's charge that the Public
Wolfare Commission is incompe
tent. Two House committees will
hold a hearing Tuesday night to
investigate the governor's charge,
Among other things, the gover-
to do that,
The legislature's Joint Ways
and Means Committee is acting
on appropriation bills much faster
than usual. It is studying the lit
tie appropriations In order to con
centrate on the big ones toward
the end of the session
Grangers
Add Award
Even the President Is forbidden
by law to change the decor of
the first floor of the White House.!
Q m mm mm m m m D
m a & fin i m (9
thru the Excitement Barrier!
EXPLODING
with Love and Danger!
Gable Monroe ;Clill
-
''lilMflill
cfl-sTARRiNGTielma Ritter Eli Wallach
ADULTS
ONLY V
N. mil4r.il
- Vn4r in
A4mllU4
UIM
trmfmlt4
ay a a oir
Cnllnm T4r htm ItiW Lnr MiUhi Talis? tl 1:11
to NOW SHOWING!
F$2
BLY-Bly Grunge No. 771 added
mother award to its ' collection
hen Victor Croxton, State
Jrange deputy, presented
plaque to Bly Master Ruth Hall
ut a recent meeting.
These awards are given by the
National Grange and the Scars,
Roebuck Foundation to organiza
(Ions for community service proj
ects.
This contest was started In 1948
and Bly Grange has won an
award every year except one
That year It received honorable
mention. Bly Grange won first
place in 1949 in the state and re
ceived $200 plus a plaque.
The grange has won over $700
since 1948 in prize money be
sides plaques and a silk flag.
This year the grange was the
only unit in Klamath County to
win an award. There are 10
granges in Klamath County.
Plaintiff
Loses Suit
For Damages
A former Weyerhaeuser'Timber
Company employe, Houston Da
vis, who had sued the company
and a fellow employe for $107.-
000 came away without a penny
after a civil trial in circuit court
this week.
Davis had asked the huge sum
as a result of back injuries he
received in September, 1959, in
a playful scuffle in the Weyer
haeuser plant with Carl Johnson.
Davis contended that the scuffle
violated a company rule against
"horseplay" and, therefore, both
the company and Johnson were
able for his injuries.
Judge Charles H. Foster de
clared voluntary non-suits hi fa
vor of both defendants, thereby
denying Davis claims for dam
ages. His attorneys, Sidney Le
cik of Portland and Donald
A. W. Piper of Klamath Falls,
gave notice of appeal to the
State Supreme Court,
Bruce Spaulding of Portland
represented Weyerhaeuser, while
hdwin Dnscoll of Klamath Falls
defended Johnson.
The Senate Slate and Federal
Affairs Committee begins hear
ings next Wedhesday on the la
bor-management bills. These are
likely to be among the most hot
ly debated bills of the legislature.
They provide for elections to de
termine bargaining agents, and
set up enforcement procedures!
against unfair labor and manage
ment practices.
Another hot bill will be intro
duced Monday, ft is the so-called
three-way bill, and has the sup
port of industry and the opposi
tion of labor.
The three-way bill would extend
immunity from employe personal
injury suits to those employers
who self-insure or have private in
surance. This immunity is grant
ed now only to those employers
who are covered by the state In
dustrial Accident Commission.
Gov. Hatfield favors self-insur
ance, but opposes the private In
surance provision.
tOmm Pills, OrtoffA
Srvlne Southern OrA
and Ntvthrn Call farm
PublilhM dally (except Set.) end fund
bv
lejuttwn Ortvon Publlthlnf CnVMiy
Mem ii p.tQieneae
Ptwnt Tu-eog 44111
W. SWEiTLANO. PublUhtr
Intered ei second cieu metier et me
pott office at Klemalh Petit, Orooon,
en August M, 10. under act of Con
trols. March 1 lift. Second-doss post-
tee paid at Kiemem Pans. Oregon,
tnd at additional mailing offices.
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'UNITED PRESS IN I PPNA T IdjNAC I
A5IOCIATID PRESS 1
audit bureau op circulation
Subscriber net receiving delivery of
their Herald and News, ftiooM phono.
Gene Carpenter, rirtuiatten Manager i
"As God Is My Witness,
My Hands Are Cle3n."
NIKITA KHRUSHCHEV
This statement was made by the
atheist leader of a Oodless na
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HtwVvtCkv
to cncHoration with Th dvM.4n
Courx-H anil tla N..n,p.r
AAwrtiamt Uacutnwa Aaiocialwfl.
constructed for Pacific Gas and
Electric Company, stretches from
Alberta, Canada, to California,
where it terminates at Antioch.
ft stretches 1.368 miles -across
Alberta and British Columbia,
Canada, through Idaho, Washing
ton. Oregon and California. Total
mileage in Canada is 494 miles,
and total U.S. mileage is 910.
In Oregon, 358 miles are being
constructed. Included in the lat
ter total are 156 miles from the
Oregon - California border to
Bend, which Is being constructed
bv the Klamath Falls field of-:
lice, Krelschmar explained.
Except for 125 miles of the
Alberta line, which is 30 inches
in diameter, all of the transmis
sion line will be of 36-inch diameter.
Route of the gas line takes it
throueh altitudes ranging from
6,600 feet to sea level, Kret
schmar explained. Terrain in
cludes forested mountains, can
yons, deserts, farmlands, range-
lands, lava beds, and a score of
river ' crossings. Temperatures
vary from 115 degrees in the
summer to 55 degrees below zero
the winter. This wide fluctu
ation, he explained, accounts for
the extreme care and skilled
planning that goes into the ac
tual Installation of the line.
Most of the line is buried up
to depths of 80 to 84 inches, as
regulations specify that it must
be covered with 36 inches of
cover.
COSTS HUGE
Cost of the project is huge,
Kretschmar said. While he was
not in a position to give explicit
figures, he explained that esti
mated capital costs, furnished to
regulating agencies in Canada
and the United States, totaled 337
million dollars.
Pacific Gas Transmission
The pipeline construction
dustry and related fields is a tre
mendous national industry, Krel
schmar said.
In the United States there are
pipeline.
Ily two billion dollars ($1,890,000,
"' OOOl during the year.
Forecast for- gas pipeline fa
cilities in 1961 is set at $2,219,
000,000 of which the transmission
cost alone is expected to reach
AFFECTS AREA
The tremendous scope of the
project has and will continue to
have some effect on the Klam
ath Basin economy, Kretschmar
explained.
The 158 - mile border-to-Bend
stretch employs from 200 to 250
men at peak employment periods,
he said. At the present, during
the "winter shutdown," about lOOj
men are being employed, it
weather is favorable, the com
pany plans to resume full-scale
operations not later than April
l,.he added. Completion date fori
the project has been set for Sept.
1, 1961.
Kretschmar pointed to some of
the direct benefits of the project.
They include approximately $250.-
000 in payroll dollars here from
November through January.
Additional benefits, he said,
come from purchases made lo
cally. In this instance, the. com
pany has spent approximately
$300,000 in gas, oil, lubricants,
parts, tires, accessories, freight
and small tools and other items
provided by nearly 100 business
firms in Klamath Falls.
Western Pipe Line, Inc., favors
employment of local labor wher
ever possible, Kretschmar said. I
In the Klamath Falls project,
nearly 120 men came from the
local pool, with about 80 im
ported." The latter include the
skilled and semi-skilled men that
are concerned with engineering i
and supervision of the project,
he explained.
Kretschmar pointed out that
approximately 130 operating $1,060,000,000, he said.
transmission companies, and a to
tal of 487 pipeline , construction
Play Program
To Be Offered
A supervised free play program
will be offered by the Klamath
Falls Park and Recreation De
Dartment in the Klamath Audi
torium Saturdays from 9 a.m.
until noon and from I to 4 p.m.
The first play period was con
ducted Feb. 4. Each session
youngsters will be offered a va
riety of activities, including Das
ketball, volleyball, ping pong, box
hockev. miniature bovvling and
others, says Gary Woodring, rec
reation supervisor.
Acceleration of the jet age is
expected to bring additional ac
tivity in the industry, he said.
This will come as more airfields
demand greater quantities of jet
fuel, which will be piped direct
to the fields.
WANT TO LEARN
TO DRIVE?
Phone TU 4-7(90
Land For Sale
PORTLAND (AP) -. Fifteen
tracts of land embracing some
1.029 acres in the Pendleton and
Umatilla areas are up for sale,
the Bureau of Indian Affairs said
today. Bids will be opened in
Pendleton Feb. 28.
The allotted lands include tracts
suitable for farming, grazing, log
ging and business development,
the bureau said.
: " " "a--!- TrTmYm issTon " " "i
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734 South 6th
Phone TU 4-4197
500 GALLONS
HEATING OIL
WITH EVERY OIL FURNACE INSTALLATION
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It is gratifying indeed to have a heating bill
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4436 Denver Ave. Klamath Falli, Oregon
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Summer Circulation Switch
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Phone TU 4-3873
TU-edO V1II before 1 P.M.