Uneasv Wife Xeeils Help I HERALD AND VEWS, Klamath Falls, Orrgon Tuesday, February II, 1961 PAGE 3 A By ANN LANDERS Dear Ann Landers: Is it pos sible that I am allergic to my husband? I'm perfectly fineev- : ery day after he leaves for work. I hum and sing as I do the like a hammer. house since I was six years old and I love it. I've grown up with the same kids and our high school is the greatest. My father's business is 10 miles away. Suddenly he has decided he hates to drive so much and he wants to move. The thoueht of not housework. The graduating with my friends makes minute I hear, me sick. I've tried to make mv dad see how important this is toi me but he says it's childish and that once I'm in another school forget all about this one. his key in the lock my heart begins to pound I feel faint and! I'll sometimes I get dizzy. Often dur ing dinner I am nauseated and can only pick at my food. When we visit friends or rela tives together I feel uneasy and sometimes I shake for no reason. When I see these people without him I'm perfectly at ease. My husband is a domineering man. His relatives call him "Mr. Always Right." It seems as if I am always on the defensive. What does this sound like to you? ALWAYS WRONG Dear Always: You're on t h e right track. Your awareness that the presence of your husband has a harmful physical effect on you is a good beginning. Many wom en go through life half sick, with out the foggiest notion of what ails them. (Sometimes it's a moth er, a mothci -in-law, a brother or a Dutch uncle.) You nopd nlltsirip heln. Ask vnur doctor to have a talk with your'self adtil'essed envelope husband. And ask him if he thinks both you and your husband need I D L. therapy-or just you. Cryil1CJ BODy Dear Ann Landers: The otherSciVCS Family" .... 1 I 1 - evening i wdiiueieu iinu a cucKldll lounge and seated myself next to an attractive woman at the bar. She seemed friendly so I was friendly, too. After about 10 min utes of conversation she made it plain that she'd like dinner and a night on the town. I was inter ested in a more intimate evening. She called the manager and asked that I be thrown' out. I was. What I want to know is this: I've always understood that a sin gle woman in a bar who is easy Please, Ann, help me. I am 'get ting phvsicallv ill over this. cracki'ng UP Dear Cracking: If this means so much to you why not ask tor permission to room and board with a close friend's family five days a week and go home week ends? Such an arrangement would let ynu finish high school with your friends and would solve your problem neatly. Good luck. Are you tempted to smoke be cause the crowd does? If so, send for Ann Landers' booklet, "Teen age Smoking," enclosing with your request 10 cents in coin and long, self-addressed, stamped envelope. Ann Landers will be glad to help you with your problems. Send them to her in care of this newspaper enclosing a stamped, mi.- r-atmi- ! sWuiPHf ,Mln KI li 1 M i Inn I I I II i n Solons Ask HI Travel Gap Be Closed AN OPERETTA, "Seasons of Happiness," will be presented at Mills School Auditorium, Friday, Feb. 24. Students of the fourth grade through the seventh will take part under the direction of Mrs. Robert Craig, music director for Mills. In the quaint plot, the four seasons of the year vie for supremacy and the right to rule the year around. But a bewigged judge and jury of the 12 months of the year decide Spring should rule for three months. Doors will be open at 7 p.m. The music treat begins -at 7:45. Left to right, front row, are Mary Fanning, Mother Nature; Sandra Bray, Summer; Bobbi Jean Brady, Spring, Linda Friesen, Mother Nature, and Brent Lake, judge. Rear, left, Bob Moore, King Winter, and Steve Dippold, Autumn. Kennedy Tops In Publicity GRAND RONDE (AP) baby's cry in the night awakened a family at this Polk County community early Monday just be fore flames swept through their small home. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Waldon lost their home and all its contents despite efforts of three fire crews from Willamina. The Waldons said their baby's. cries awakened them. They said thov fnnnrl thp livinn rnnm in to talk to is fair game for ainames Tney picked up baby! proposition. Why should she be "insulted" and ask the manager to throw out a guy who asks? She could decline the offer with out raising a fuss, couldn't she? Your opinion, please. PLAYING IT STRAIGHT Dear Playing It; When a shop per sees an item on the bargain counter he has a right to as sume it's available. A girl who sits alone at a bar and "looks friendly" puts herself in the same category. Such a g I r I has no right to feign indignation when she is propositioned. If she didn't want company she'd be at home. Dear Ann Landers: I am a jun ior in high school and broken hearted. We have lived in this and raced outside. Willamina Fire Chief Jim Ship ley said the blaze apparently be gan near living room. an oil stove in the UNIT MEETS The Friendly Neighbors Home Extension Unit of Crescent and Gilchrist met at the home of Mrs. Earl Burger on Feb. 9. Mrs. Dale McHone and Delorcs McHone were hostesses to the all-day ses sion. A politick dmner was served By JAMES MARLOW Associated Press News Analyst WASHINGTON (AP) Presi dent Kennedy may someday get A .political pneumonia from over exposure in public. But not now. Meanwhile, he is doing a unique job of public relations in the White House. A president's popularity is al ways at a high mark in his first few months. So any danger that Kennedy will wear out his wel come must come later. What is unique is that he is try ing to establish as much personal contact as possible with the peo ple on TV, before news cameras and in public statements. No mat- ter what his purpose, he is also, providing an education in the presidency. Last week, for instance, TV showed him in his office confer ring with his budget bureau aides and talking on the phone during the Congo crisis w ith Ambassador1 Adlai E. Stevenson at the United Nations. Sunday the New York Times' around much because of his con finement to a wheel chair. His only direct contact with the mass es was as a voice over the radio. Thus he had to depend mostly on the magic of his voice to create a sense of himself. His news conferences, which he used for all they were worth to get his ideas across, appeared only in print. President Truman completely lacked a dramatic sense. He, too. had to depend on news conference WASHINGTON (UPI' - The Senate called up for debate Mon day the adi.iinistration-backed pro posal to close the "travel gap" causing a $1 billion a year over seas drain on U.S. gold reserves. The bill has the bipartisan spon sorship of 2il senators, including i Commerce Committee Chairman Warren G. Mirgnuson, D-Wash. A similar measure passed the Sen ate last year, but died in the House. It calls for establishment of a S3 million Office of International Travel within the Commerce De partment to be headed by an as sistant secretary. The function of the new agency would be to lure foreign tourists and their money to Ameri can vacation spots through a "hard sell" promotional cam paign. President Kennedy urged such action in his Slate of the Union Message and in a letter to Mag- nuson saying the plan would ease the balance of payments deficit." Other congressional news: Spending: Chairman Harry F. Byrd of the Senate Finance Com mittee urged Congress to tighten the reins on federal spending by using an annual general expendi ture authorization bill. Byrd said in a prepared Senate speech that meet a lot of people personally :lcgjsalion at one lime. He did the same oni We ore confessing our mistakes, oin the revolution, look for the balloon and special tickets 'throughout the store Happy Birthday George, we have tuned u p our red hatchets for your birthdey celebration. IT'S A YANKEE DOODLE REVOLUTION Colorful replicas of flowers whicji bloomed at Valley Forge . . . froit bitten, will ed, battle scarred. Pick them by the yordtul , . . Truthfully, they're not worth a continental . . . 17c Since 1776, our population grows by leaps and bounds, and we stocked enough bras to supply the nation. The elastic alone would moke good sling shots. Please come, take 'em and leave just .... 76c Cavemen d f d not need petti coats and these 8.98 pre historic bouf fonts we don't need either. Do dragyours awoy . . . 2.76 H used neighborhood receptions to a statewide scale when he ran for the Senate. For some years before he sought the presidency he was for ever moving around to meet peo ple, individually or in groups, to establish personal contact and build an image of himself as a man for the White House. He is not running for anything j The 90 U.S. glass container fac tories produce some 19 billion glass containers annually. Our casual dress buyer says she has no mistakes to confess (and we hope this is no lie) ... so she is taking 100 new spring dresses . . . cottons, cot ton knits, silks, jacket dresses . . . whatever she is unpacking, regularly 15.95 to 19.95 to cele brate, Wednesday only, y One of our manu facturers shipped sleeveless blouses in the midst of winter. He hung the shipping clerk and we're hung with the blouses, rope yours . . 2.76 es and almost entirely on radiojnow. But he is trying to establish to reach the public directly. President Eisenhower had TV, which he used from time to lime to make statements or explana tions. Otherwise, his public ap pearances were mostly on jour neys or on TV news conferences shown hours after they occurred. Any sight of Eisenhower in the himscll clearly as a leader, par ticularly when dealing with Con gress. If he can line up w ide pub lic support, his task with Congress will be easy. In addition, his activity gives a sense of movement, which is im portant for him to get across to the vast and slow-moving govern- Cake decorating was demonstral heads magazine section had four pages of pictures of Kennedy at work in the While House with his assist ants, advisers and department White House was usually formal. imcnl bureaucracy. Kennedy's attempts to make the country conscious of him as' an individual and as a president parallels in a way the public ap pearance technique he used when he represented Massachusetts in Congress. When he ran for the House he Kennedy is said to have been greatly impressed by Richard E. Neustadt's acute book, "Presiden tial Power." He has brought the Columbia professor into his camp as an adviser on government. Neustadt went into great detail on a president's public relations. WASHERS & DRYERS ALL OUR WORK IS GUARANTEED Factory authorized parts and guaranteed work on all makas and models of larga and small appliances! And, free pickup, delivery! CALL TU 4-4197 J.W. KERNS 734 S. trh Take me to your leader later, alter I grab one of these saucy flying duster 1. coats for only . . 4.76 Wa felt In love with the sales man's Italian charm, and or dered too mony knit dresses. We put him in stocks but can't keep these 16.95 knits. For happy international relations drop your knitting and donate 8.76 The British are coming. They left behind 3 genuine plastic copies of British Eobby raincapes, these were all the rage at 5.95 . . . for cor covers, tents, what have you, cough up , 76c Helen's on vacation so we just took some of her coots ond reduced them in the spirit of the doy. 17.74. ed by Mrs. Burger and M r s. Crawford Page. Knitting was demonstrated by Mrs. Jack Tay lor. The next meeting will be held Feb. 23. He already has had four tele vised news conferences, three of them live. There was no TV in President Roosevelt's time. He couldn't get iMTiMiWi iiMilir IiHaM ii iliil 1MI GUARANTEE Buy any other compact-then test The Lark. You'll hate yourself... because 9 other compacts make you step over a high door-sill and down into a well ... 7 others have far less power... 8 others are priced $9 to $532 higher. And you could have had The Lark -so hot, so responsive, so easytohandle, it outran all other compacts at Sebring! So carefully built, it saves up to 's on gasoline, Vj on maintenance, Vi on repairs! WHY HATE YOURSELF? TEST-DRIVE IT TODAY r mi i " "j)jailiii diiin - n t 12 iii iaiir ir" " v":';" ". i'! J ' " " ImIuiiiOiiIiiiMHii THE '61 AMRI Sat it today at your Studebaker dealer's. STUDEBAKER itmtmttimmmmimumMtiiimmitmirtrMim aaiiiiritiaiiimr REMNANTS FROM OUR rr ' (pninpi I MILES Our buyer wishes she could can these soft girdles, perfect for sar dines, mermaids and slender elves ... if you're thin you'll grab a bargain, else bring metrecal and . 1 .26 2 wonderful ttores in Southern Oregon, one has 8 too many mo ternity dresses, the other, one ex tra wedding gown . , . what would Kinsey soy? We are not sociologists maybe you are. 4.76 ond 7.76, guess which is which. Four score and 7 years ago our forefathers brought forth these largo size founda tions, pretick cted at $20. They are per fect for cos tume parties, slingshots and ideal if we have your size . . . please bring 3.76 4 H'ifl "v'Vs YJ V '"I ' J HOW, YOU CAN CHARGE IT! Many of the tremendous val ues offered during our big ORDERED SOLD SALE for cash only are now available to you on credit. Pay nothing down and take up to a YEAR TO PAY. Here are a few of the big barqains left from this gigantic sale! Ladies' Diamond Marquise Cluster Was $275 CHARGE IT 14 Kr. White Gold Wedding Set 1 Only Ladies Yellow Gold Bulova wcHAsf,T Was $149 CHARGE IT 5137 $77 543 l-only Ladies' Bulova 14 kf. Yellow Gold Woi $95.00 47.50 Charge It! Lodiei 14 kr. White Gold Engagement Ring Center Stone t ct. Totol 3 itonel 1.40 ct. SV. i2M- 632 1 Man'i Yellow Gold Solitaire Woi $115.00 $53 Charge It! Who will slote? Feels it's rabbit One whitish 19.95. Hop steal this fur like mink but that's haddit. cape . . . wos In with 7.76. Knight Wear , . . medieval cotton pj's and baby dolls. At 4.00 they are still in our cas tle. Now joust yours at 1.76. MM All that glitters isn't sold. Grab your shovel and .dig into this jewelry. 57c Take A Year To Pay RCKYS 700 MAIN STREET Help! Save our buyer . . . she's drowning In 100 nylon Bonnie Doon socks. Oceans of colors and sizes. They were $1.50 per pair, rescue yours in the revolu tionary spirit, 17e per pair, or ... . S pair 76c We can hordly tear our selves away from these dar ling dresses. We just love 'em but you can't liv on love alone . . . rip . them off to your house for just 4.76 H Now have your I coke and eot it J too ond look slim. Wear ma ternity tops and fool your friends . . . Just tor fun todoy they are 2.76 "Suited to a T ... these suits were hot stuff ot 39.95. Three ore still . here and our buyer is steam ing. Cool her off ot . . . 17.76 Wooden shoe like to take ad vantage of our crazy buyer? All new spring college deb flats 8.95 and 10.95 . . . now 6.90. Benedict Arnold must have bought these because no one in the store ad mits .ordering them. Taffeta formol length slips. Do us a Happy Birthday favor and toke them away . . . Only ... 1.76 George Wash ington slept here in these cozy flannel baby doll paja mas. Join the charge of the light brigade and c h ar g e 2.76 You think the winter at Valley Forge was cold? Then think of these suf fering formats . . . they al ways got a cold shoulder at 29.95. You will warm up to them at this price. A whale of a buy , . . spout out only , 7.76 Navy Poacoati dating back to Washington's army . . . in eorly American plotds . . . bullet proof. 5.76. Wi'm giving them the bird. Pretty cagey half slips . . . block ones, con federate rjrr y ones, tattletale white ones. Ply in with 0 giMed 2.76 ffl 'V ' ; Your husband will eat breokfast blindfolded when you wear one of these 5.98 brunch coats. Hop on your pogo stick and bounce on oown . , , o steal at 2.76. 1 Reward for people who . read small print (jS . . . vintage blue jeans and fl Levi's. 1,76. IS 9 Bearnick clothes, remnants of a shipwreck at Plymouth Rock . . , Sportswear ga lore . . Rescue yours. 1.76 and 3.76 W-