Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (March 12, 1961)
r t1 Daughter's Jilting Crushes Parents rest. ; By ANN LANDERS Dear Ann Landers: One year ago our Jovcly daughter started to Eo with a presentable looking boy. we tried feebly a few times to break (hem up but the boy seemed "nice" so we lnt it drift. .List broke a date with her saying he couldn't get the car. Then he called to say he was dating another girl and he w&nted his ring back. Within a week his ring was dangling from another girl's chain. Our daughter? Well, that s a; different story. Do you know what1 it is to hold a high school girl in your arms while she sobs that! she doesn t want to live with out him? Her appetite is gone and she s a hollow-eyed, crushed old lady of 17. She still turns down dates because she says she can t trust another boy. It hurts to know that as par- . ents we fumbled our duty. We could have saved her this heart break if we had broken them up early. - HER FATHER Dear Father: Sorry I don't agree and I'm not inclined to (H down and cry with you, either. High school girls and boys break up by the thousands daily. Rings, sweaters I.D. bracelets, pictures and (he whole bit are traded back and forth with such speed that univac would have a tough (fme recording (he transactions. A 17-year-old who has to sob it out in her father's arms sounds as if she's much too young to be going with boys. And shame on YOU for crying with her. You fumbled all right by falling to point out that life has many grave disappointment and the ones who can take whatever life dishes out will do Just flue. The cry-babies who are knocked out by everything that happens to fhrm are in for a rough time, indeed. You'd better acquaint this girl with some of (he realities if life. With her marshmallow approach she'll fold like an ac cordion if anything REALLY tragic hits her. ' ; - was that he cooked up "dental appointments" during the day, pretended to go bowling in the afternoon, invented a sick buddy in the vet's hospital, lied about going to the turkish bath, the chiropractor, his mother's house. And then he got me a part- time Job in a bakery so he could have women at the house from 1 o'clock to 4 p.m. It was there that I caught him. Any woman who thinks watch- ing a guy will keep him on the straight and narrow should re member this: If a man is worth his salt you don't have to watch him. Any man who needs watching isn't fit to live with. - BEEN THRU IT Dear Been: Thank you for echo ing my sentiments. I have said it often, but you have said It better. P.S. The same goes for women. Confidential to IN DOUBT: Re ligious Iraditioos and convictions are not matters of "etiquette." If kneeling in prayer is part of YOUR religion, then do It wher ever you are. If It Is not, then do not kneel ever, no mat ter what others do. Does almost everyone have a good time but you? If so, send for ANN LANDERS booklet, How To Be Well-Liked," enclos ing with your request 20 cents in coin and a long, sclf-addrcsscd, 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, self-addressed envelope. 4 . IF ZZ s iMi "' ):) ' Lsw I 4 I Jt.. Mil Li ?:-'r- New Agricultural Gareeis;. Opened By 4-H Program 'PAGE I-A Farm Safety, Drive Held LIFE RANK SCOUTS, Kenneth Ternus, left, and Roy Berr. .-Photo by Jerry Ternus, Tulolake. Many Awards Made At Air Squadron Honor Court ' 'pear Ann Lariders: The woman yiho sot in Uie bar every eve ning to keep an eye on her bartender-husband could profit from my experience. I did the tame thing for iVt years. It doesn't work. II a man wants to cheat he'll find a way. .My Jerry was very handsome and ho had a way wlw women. l: sat in that cocktail bar for eight hour stretches night af ter night. What I didn't know fJilVf ihjovDirM i I I Ira p MALIN This area's chap tor of Future Farmers of Amer ica Is sponsoring a farm safety contest and participants must identify a number of common hazard" around the home and farm. A drawing containing the haz ards for contestants to find is available at Albers Feed and Farm Supplies, J. W. Kerns, U.S. National Bank, Main Street, and First National Bunk, Main Street, Klamath Falls: C and E Market, Dee's Cafe and Wilde's, Malin; Merrill Lumber Company and First National Bank, Merrill, and Floyd A. Boyd Implement Com pany and Don Potter Farm Equipment Company. Tulciake, Contestants must list the haz ards they've found on an official entry blank attached to the pa per and send them to Malin FFA, Malin High School. Entries must be postmarked no later than midnight, March 31, and received by April 3. The contest is open to anyone of any ago, snve club members ana their families. Each may en ter only one blank. Winners will be announced April 8 during a donkey basket ball game sponsored by the chap ter. Winners need not be pres ent to receive the prizes a (Ire extinguisher for tho first winner, seat cushions for the sec ond and trouble lights for t h e third. : The earliest entry will win In case of a lie. TULELAKE Air Squadron No. 44, former Explorer Troop 44, held a Court of Honor March 2 when a large number of awards and merit badges were presented by Jerry Ternus, president of the sponsoring Kiwunis Club, and Lylc Shcrer, public safety committeeman. Members of the Air Squadron are actively concerned with avi ation, working with a group at Kingslcy Field, Klamath Falls, and the Tulelnko Flying Reserve Squadron. 0. E, Pedersen has served as scoutmaster since 11)48. Pcderson has been In scout work over 30 years. ( Mrs. Henry Rutzen presented Hll'SII DAILY! RIADY TO DRINK FOOD FOR THOUGHT CINCINNATI, Ohio (UPI) - Diamond setter Fred Mauser Inst his lunch bag containing 13 dia mond rings while en route to work Thursday. Police reported that they found the bag and rings, but the banana and ham sandwiches were missing. Three Given Death Order TALLIN, Estonia (AP)-A Sovi et court sentenced three wartime police officials to death today for the mass murders of thousands ol Jews, Gypsies and Soviet citizens during World War II. "The sentence may not be ap pealed," Judgo- Robert Slmson declared after reading Uie sen tence. Two of the condemned men Rnlf Gerrets, 85, and Jan Vijk, 44, were present at the trial. The third, Aln Erwln Mere, 57, now lives in England and was trlod In abientia by the Soviot govern mcnt, which has ruled Estonia since the war. The court at the end of a six- day trial found all three guilty of shooting to death many thousand prisoners and concentration camp victims during 1042, 1043 and 1044, There were 37 concentration camps in Estonia, and the Soviet; police authorities say at least 123. 000 persons were killed in them. The court said all three had par ticipated in "horrible brutality" against the prisoners. the squadron with an American flag given at the time of hei husband's death by a patriotic group. Mr. Rutzen had been ac tive in Boy Scout work in Tule- lake. Clayton Rudeslll Is assistant scoutmaster; Paul Kanitz, junior scoutmaster: executive advisers are Mike Pedersen. Bill Roper and Ed Osborne. Members of the Troop Committee include Otis Ro per, chairman. Ed Duckctt, treas urer, Don Potter, L. C. Tatum and Clayton Rudesill. Senior pa trol leaders, are Roy Barr and Kenneth Ternus. Life Scout Rank went to Roy Barr and Kenneth Ternus. Other awards include Star Scout, Joe Hoyle, Jim Skclton, Bill McBride; First Class Scout, Terry Alcorn, Everett Hunter, Brace Young, Kenneth Wood, Bill McBride, Garry Tatum. . Socond Class Scout, Kenneth Wood, Dick Powell, Robert ow oil, Rick Rincbarger, Steve Blu menthal, Terry Alcorn, Bruce Young, Garry Long, D e n n i e Hodges, Terry Cantrcll, Joe Wood. Steve Maharry. Merit badges went to Joe Wood, home repairs; Terry Cantrcll, Kenneth Tenuis, citizenship in the home, pets, pioneering; Terry Al corn, home repair; Everett Hunt er, home rcpuir, citizenship in the home, salesmanship; Bill Me Brido, citizenship in the home, personal fitness, reading, home rcpuir. Jorry Wooten, first aid, firo- munship; Roy Barr, soil and wa tcr conservation, bugling: Freddie Treat, stump collecting; Jerry Ott, first aid; Joe Hoyle, pioneering. reading; Joe Manccau, citizenship in the community; Jim Skclton. cooking, camping, citizenship in the home. Larry Tatum, first eld, camp ing; Stanley Lynum, reading, cit izenship in the homo; Mike Sabol, citizenship in the community; Jer ry Potter, citizenship in the com munity; Dcnnic Hodges, outstand ing marksmanship. More than 150 were present fur the meeting in the home econom ics building of the fairgrounds. The honor program for Klam ath County's 4-H Club livestock producers can open new careers in agricultural sciences to local youth, says Francis Skinner, county extension agent. Since It has been field tested! for the past two years, Oregon State College specialists are con vinced the new program has merit, and is going ahead with new printed materials, and train ing volunteer leaders to carry It out. About 400 local youth are! already enrolled in livestock proj ects. The new 4-H livestock advance ment program was developed to meet the needs of youngsters who want to go beyond usual 4-H proj ect oiferings, and learn more about livestock production, genet ics, breeding and marketing. In the past, a livestock club member's main accomplishment was to raise an animal and show it at a fair. These fairs have provided recognition for perform ance in livestock classes, but no credit has been given for ad vanced study to other livestock and related fields. Here's how it works, says Skin ner: The 4-H livestock member en rolls voluntarily In the advance ment program and agrees to ful fill certain requirements. When he's ready to advance to more difficult stages, he appears be fore a livestock graduate com-1 mittee made up of local 4-H lead ers and livestock breeders and his work is reviewed. The advancement - program! practically outlines a years pro gram of work, which makes it easier for 4-H leaders to teach. Under the program the member has a chance to advance accord ing to his ability. "We feel this advancement pro gram is going to invite interest1 in off-the-farm jobs that many youngsters have never heard of before. There are any number of jobs In agriculture that go beg ging each year in teaching, marketing, veterinary medicine, animal breeding, plant genetics, and in technical writing that we can't help make youth aware of, 1 says Skinner. The first honor program In livestock was started several years ago with the 4-H horse project. It received such favor able response that last ' winter advancement programs for beef, sheep, swine, dairy stock and rab bits were developed. Burrill Wilis Timber Bid Successful bidder for 6.100,000 board feet of timber in the South Fourmile sale offered last week by the Klamath District, Rogue River Forest, was Eugene Bur rill of Medford. His only competitor was Brc- count Brothers of Grants Pass. Burrill bid $113,490 just $120 over the appraised price and minimum bid price set by the forest service. The area, near Lake of the Woods, contains an estimated 2, 300.000 board feet of Douglas fir. 2,400,000 feet of white fir and other species, 1.100.000 feet of Shasta red fir and ,300,000 feet of pondcrosa and western white pine. The timber will be harvested next fall, the forest service re ported. Another sale is scheduled for; Monday, March 13, at 2:30 p.m in tile district office in the post office building. The Pothole Sal vage sale contains an estimated 1,300,000 feet of pondcrosa, sugar and white- pine, 200,000 feet of Shasta red fir and other species and the minimum bid price 55 and $1-15 per thousand, re spectively, said Earl Karlinger, district ranger. HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls, Ore. Sunday, March 12, list i . r TheyH Do It Every Time -"i- - By Jimmy Hatlo ; I r r""lJJ535$MINDIFIHAVE NO-GO AMBAD- STILTSON IS VERY ljj?ffVKS THIS CHA-CHA J I OKAV, FW.-ENOOV j Bifj-HBAfJTED ABCXJT fjK WITH VOUB V VOURSELF JT GUVS DANCING WITH fIJ fY"5, X 7 r 7T & . IS HEV-" iVe 6EEM ONS& St' ll J But ASK him pJsl meaning to read LJ S is leno books-'.' "e FOR ANVTHING "&J THIS MIND IF I CT THIS AIN'T NO PUBLIC NT I ELSE -NOT WhfLOa sE A CHANCE' SiKfenE WEEK END?- I .T TIjTV AND A TIP Of- TOG HATLO HAT fo LES PETEGSdN, 203 S.OUANITA, R60ONDO 8EACHV "Yi CALIF. F. HAMBER OMMENTS by GEORGE T. CALLISON Manager KLAMATH COUNTY CHAMBER OF COMMERCE Many Take School Test I'J- - Prof. William J. Richardson Professor To Lead Service Original 55th Annual DANCE Community Hall Merrill, Ore. Friday, March 17th 10 p.m. till 2 a.m. Music By Pee Wee Stidham and hit Burt Vallty Rongfrs Special Attraction Lee Williams and His Square Dancers Admission 1.00 Per Person Proceeds from Dance go to Recreation for Children Chairman Ben T. Murphy Co-Chalrman Warren Walker STAR GAXER) .-13 11M-44 .f TAUIUI jf. AP 21 t MAY 21 6 10-11 -34 58 6MK)-87 OIMIM r MAY 22 6B 73 95 90 CANCU WJ-?J-31-3d f. '50 61 -7 1 IIO JULY 24 LJV667477 vttoo AUG. 2; ' ' X JQ 'O -Bjr CLAY R- POLLAN- H Your Oaiy AtUvily Qvitf H According to Iht Start. To develop message for Monday, read words correipoixJing to numbers 01 your Zodiac birth itgn. t Dnn't 31 Tottav't A You 2 Kttfi 32 IMtmioIfy 62 You 3S(v .13 With 6J Rcnitio 4 This 3 Sudden ft Trouble ! Don't 35 Siroiohren 6! Importoitf 6 Cteur 36 Piotilm 66 ChdrKt 7 0 37 Ptop! 6 ror 8 36 Appfovol 69 W.ll 9 Dflv 30 Ovormi 6 Spec tfll 10 Could 40 Overlook 70 F-or lift 41Aie.oie 7! tr- lJYrxjr 4?Vfuf 72 SoiirxKyy 13Thtnj 1 Nervoui 73 Siw 14 Ci.xjtd A Ckit 7 Tn 4iAM 75 Well 16 Find AfcWtw 76T(woy l?Of 471ou 77tWitt tflUO 4flM 7HSh.Hl 19Plor 49AprxiT 79ftt.v iONtnif .SOiWl BO lour ?l Will M U l I" 2? You i?At B3Soxiol 15 Revamp SJ I ,l A-xl 24 Shun !4 Thiio J A.rlhoniy JSLft 5 Pretty RSVki 6 Oihef S6 Or 6 Service ? Argument. 57 Arnn't &7 Sivks 2d A Ml 0-rwi R 'ohim . 29 f-p'e' 5 txsm Q Noon JO W.i 0 ff torrt 0 Pr fferrtt (f) Gotxl AJvene ) Neutrll UIIA :i5-18-3WVt XT. 2 NOV. 23 4- 914-161 &35-43 UOITTAKIUS NOV. 23 n fci 70 82 84V?: CAMtKOtN it 'AN 30 r 6-17 .,. P 64-83-88 VMl AQUARIUI tH V 33-41,- 56-6aS1-S4Vb mcis "AAB 3t ;3?844aj 54 57-7? V Professor William J. Richard son of Northwest Christian Col-, lege in Eugene will lead First Christian Church in a week of I special services beginning S u n day, March 10, Pastor Otis B. Bell has announced. i Proiossor Richardson is well known among Christian Churches for his work In the fields of New Testament and the history of the Restoration Movement out. of which sprang the Christian Churches and Churches of Christ of today. He is a professor of Bible and history in the college, which spe cializes in training of young peo ple for church vocations such as the ministry. Christian education and church music. Richardson has bachelor of theology degree from Northwest Christian C o I- lege, and master of ails and bachelor of divinity from Butler, University. Richardson will present Uie first of a series of messages at the Sunday morning service, March 19, and will continue in oven'ng services every night through Friday, March 24. A total of SS Klamath Union Hiah School students took the National Merit Scholarship quali fying test al the high school Sat urday, said Frincipal Willard Mc Kinny. They were attempting to quali fy for further competition f o r scholarships to be awarded next year. Their qualifying test was of three hours duration. II any are picked, they will be named semi finalists next full and will be in vited to, take a second test. From thilt group, finalists will come. The winnei's will be picked on basis of school records, recom mendations, test scores, extracur ricular activities, leadership abil ity and accomplishment outside the classroom. They will receive stipends scaled to financial need from $1001 to $1,500 in size. The average scholarship awarded to freshmen last year was $1527. , Those who win no scholarship but who receive honorable men- lion are thus in better position to be picked to receive other scholarships at the schools they attend. The scholarships are offered by the National Merit Scholarship Corporation, an organization that subscribes sponsors to pay for Hie stipends. SETS UP TASK FORCE WASHINGTON (UPI - Presi dent Kennedy has formed a spe cial task force on safety to study the present American system of air traffic control, it was an nounced Thursday. The task force, to be headed by Richard R. Hough of Cleveland, will report within the next few month. Although the weather lately be lies the fact, spring is just around the corner, and unfortunately flowers are not the only things to bloom in the spring. This is the time, also, for the customary vernal crop of phony experts, itin erant repairmen and other ques tionable operators. The Portland 1Betler Business Bureau calls our attention to some of this spring's motley as sortment among them one group which has already appeared on the local scene transient roof sprayers. Says the Portland BBB. "These fast moving operators travel In light vans and trucks and usually work in suburban areas offering to spray roofs with a supposedly miracle product that carries a five (and sometimes even 10) year guarantee; preserves me roof and is fire-proof. Typical complaints against these tran sients have be'en that the "wonder- spray" washes off wjth the first rain; the slipshod workmen have damaged roofs and shrubs and, of,course, the high sounding guar antee is worthless, because the sprayers invariably leave a non existent address and telephone number. Added to these complaints lo cally was one regarding the vi cious and reprehensible practice of mulcting older persons of all the money they could scrape to gether. , Your chamber of commerce has always advjsed everyone to inves tigate before they invest. This will be especially good advice during the next several weeks. Beware of guarantees that are out of pro portion with what good common sense would dictate; be wary of items or services that can be had for a great variety of prices; shun like the plague any deal that smacks of something for nothing. In short, heed P. T. Barnum's famous remark about a sucker being born every minute; don't try to prove it. Owners of small businesses and manufacturers who are interested in local procurement by the Unit ed States government and the state of Oregon are invited to at tend a Government Procurement Counseling Conference in Portland on March 28 and 29. There is no cost: there will be no speeches, but there will be a golden oppor tunity to discuss your problems personally with counselors repre senting the Armv. Navy, Air Force, federal and slate procure ment agencies, and major prime contractors, and get on their bid ders mailing list. The conference is cosponsored by the Portland Chamber of Com merce, the state of Oregon De partment of Planning and Devel- opmcnt. Associated Oregon Indus tries, Small Business Administra tion and the Pacific -Northwest Small Business Council.. More information can be ob tained from Eugene R. Andrews, manager of the Industries Depart ment of the Portland Chamber of Commerce, or by calling the local chamber office at TU 4-S193. Finch Trial Nearing End Kite Trouble SAN JOSE, Calif. large red kite with a long white tail dipped and bobbed about 500 feet over Municipal Airport Fri day. II caused airliners and pri vate planes suddenly to switch their landing approach patterns to miss it. LOS ANGELES. (UPIl - One year ago Sunday Dr. R. Bernard Finch and Carole Tregoff were visibly shaken when a jury hear ing their first murder trial was dismissed. Moncjay their third trial nears its conclusion with the defendant-lovers still separated by jail bars. The prosecution began its final arguments in the third trial Fri day with co-prosecutor Joseph Powers launching a scathing at tack on Finch, characterizing MIk Tregoff as "the moving force" be hind the asserted scheme to kill Barbara Jean Finch, and compar ing defense attorney Maxwell Keith's courtroom manner to that of actor James Stewart." Powers portrayed his young, handsome country-style adversary as a legal James Stewart using his own modest, easy-going ways to gain sympathy for the surgeon. The deputy district attorney re ferred to a magazine article in I which Stewart said he tries to IAP) A'Sain sympathy for the characters ne plays, ana compared mis to Keith's attempts to have sympa thy for him rub off. in Finch. Powers then noted ironically that Stewart and Keith both attended Princeton University. Mrs. Finch was shot fatally July 18, 1938. in the driveway of her $65,000 West Covina, Calif.. home. The prosecution claimed Irate pilots complained to the tower and the tower complained: that Finch, .-and Miss Tregoff, lo the police. It took police-23 24, killed her to be free to marry minutes to loeute the young kite without sharing the doctor's then flyer. The kite w as hauled down. I fortune. 1 Doors Open 12:00 Continuous From 1:00: v m eik. w etw - v pr vsrABa eaei trcv Walt DiswEVs NEW ALL-CARTOON FEATURE OneHuttdricNOfie Dalmatians "TfeGHMlCOUOft mu tot. ommimMisu, Continuous sfiowi today from 12:00 Motineo Weekdays at 1:00 Doors open each evening at 4:30 I sw we .-.wrf' ANNOUNCEMENT! George Powell Certified Master Watchmaker Is Now Associated With Cofer's Watch & Clock Shop 627 Klamath Ave. Ph. TU 4-7160 ALL REPAIR WORK GUARANTEED Kiamith Pel it, Oregon ttrv'rtg Southern Ore? nd Northern Cell torn H ' PubHihod deny (etceol tel.) and Simda i kv Ittutnortl Ortgjrt PutHnhmf Compear Mem at FiBlenede Prion TU-etre i-ini W. I. SWCFTLAND. Pubilhr CnttrM oa second cleii metier et the tic it Klamath Palis. Orogon, n Autuel SO, itOe. vnor ect trt Con treat, March 1 1179. Secend-Clais peti tt Pa4 al Klamath Pant. Ortton. nd at adtjilional mailinf "ctr SUBSCRIPTION P.ATIS Corn 1 Month , tl.rf Month . SK M 1 vr ... i . Man In Ativan I Mart .... I I H 4 Mnth S10M I vtor sia.os . Carrier arts) Doetora weoMov & tunoov. eooy it UNHID PV.ISS iNlf NAriNAL ASSOCIATCD MCSS AUDIT BUftPAU OP ClUCUlAMON )ustrlMrt na rtctivihf tftl'vory of thotr Her ant) Newt, est Ono CaroonhK, rtrtuiai TU-OfM e-4111 Oetor I P to StartsTODAY Continuous Today From ..12:45 The Inn... The Guests e The Sensations... From the best-sellor by th author of Tho Man In tha Gray Flannal Suit' DON'T TRY AND COMPARE IT WITH ANYTHING YOU'VE EVER SEEN BEFORE! From 'the bestseller that makes Peyton Place read like a book of nursery rhymes! Willtr WmchHI A.WARNER BROS, picture TECHNICOLOR TECHNICOLOR- . I ..J I A I " Richard egan-dorothy McGOiRE-sandra dee nicnaru DurionDamara miSn a WARNER BROS. 'icTufte TAi ARTHUR KENNEDY-TROY DONAHUE constance ford daCK UarSOn Angie Dickinson -J .... ... Sf -t. . m w. x-ric i UOIIICa UUnil HENRY JONES cmpu Tk. CMAPLES MEPGENOAHL