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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 13, 1961)
fACE HERALD AND NEWS, Klamalh Falls. fyQ Wednrtday, September 13, 1(61 WlfC& CbaraN Post w. , . o SALEM (api me resigna tion of Chairman Joseph E. Harvey as a member of t)s Ore gon Public Welfare Commission was announced Tuesday by Gov. WarK name 0 Harvey said he was resigning! because the commission may con sider a plan for medical care of inn hihi inraiiim iirwun rnvk cians Service. OPS is an arm of the Oregon Medical Society. Harvey is OPS president, The announcement came after a closed meeting among Harvey, Hatfield, Dr. Max Parrott, Ore con Medical Society presidwt and society executive I positions would be entirely com- patible. Roscoe Miller, secretny, 'is witlvxcgiet(Jal lgSept Mr. HarvcyT resignation," Hat field said. Duriifi? his outstanding vice as chairman of the welfare com mission Mr- tjarvey has been ex tremely consciws of his duty to the public during very 'difficult tunes. Harvey said that to hold oth pobitlcns in view of the OPS proposal might subject the com mission to conflict of interest charges. At the same time Harvey reit ratMl his M'm( that the two DOORS OPEN 6:45 Writing ProIiiMf Brings Solution IWU CAIKAUKUInAKT HUUKU COMBINED ON ONE PROGRAM! I A GAY EXPERIENCE f FOR EVERYONE . . . V . W' 11 we DiDnWEII FAMILY ... A I EXCITING I i ri v rv people ... j f 5 UNMARRIED 1 1 i fft m " II VT '. II 111 l. ' 111 P v J II -L Under the medicare lag Ore gon can larm out its enure meal carcJ'l- for needy persons over 63, but not on welfare, to a private ffisurance carrier. To do this, however, would require turn ing over the entire plan, not just part of it, to the carrier. Harvey has presided over the commission in the course of sharp batik batwocn same members and Gov. Mark Hatfield. Harvey initially was appointed by Hatfield, who consistently has urged that the commission live within the welfare budget. Harvey supported this policy un til the last meeting when he re treated sayiw! it may be impos- ible far welfare to live within its budget. Hatfield said, however, he felt Harvey had done well and this had nothing to do with the resignation. The resignation left the com mission without a chairman as well as a director. Andrew Juras is acting director pending appoint ment of a successor to miss Jeanne Jewell, who resigned. r.noY rnoPlR- DOROTHY McGUIRE ANTHONY PERKINS MARJORIE WAIN ..uiiitlfcM WYUR'S mftuowN FBlHlDlYPtRW a . .Jill. T.la of th0ldWt... Wyott Earp and tht Town H Tamid with Gull and Gunil inn McCREA vida MILES-LLOYD BRIDGES Dangerous Storm Seen MIAMI, Fla. (AP) Hurricane Esther, with peak winds at 30 miles an hour, churned on a west- northwest course today as the. tropical Atlantic tossed out hurri canes in Roman candle fashion, Betsy, Debbie and now Esther have sprung In the past two weeks from the tropical storm nesting grounds off Africa s west coast. A hurricane hunter airplane from San Juan, P.R., penetrated the storm early today and esti mated the center about 1,400 statute miles cast of San Juan. The hurricane was moving west- northwest at about 12 m.p.h. Esther was labelled a "danger-. ous hurricane and shipping in her path was warned to exercise caution. Open 6.i . Start 7:00 Ends Tonight "ONCE MORE 1 WITH FEELING" "THE FUGITIVE KIND" "THURSDAY NEVER BEFORE SUCH WW MWt SIMM WAIT. ttf KM It 't I Flu "The Hound That Thought Ho Wot A Racoon" By ANN LANDERS Dear Ann Landers: I've begi staring at this piece n paper for 30 minutes trying to figure out how to put my problem into' Ijwords. I decd the logical ploce to start was at the beginnitf. sa Ml begon to rt- view my woidm j& as objectively as possible. To my surprise, tl in cidents which lead up to the pres ent mess fell into a pattern which, for the first time, made some sense. Now that I've thought things through I see th selutkm clearly. So you see, Ann Landers, you help people by just being around. Maybe this letter isn t worth mailing but since I've finished it and the envelope is stamped I'm going to send it. PROBLEM SOLVED Dear Solved: I'll never know how many readers start to write and then find the solution In the telling. Usually the letter goes into the wastebasket. I'm delight ed you mailed yours. Thanks for the day-brightener. Dear Ann Landers: 1 work with a delightful young woman. She is about 25, attractive and thought ful. Everyone in the office loves her. Although I'm old enough to be her mother we are more like girl friends which of course is flattering to me. Several months ago she mar ried a handsome man. She seemed very much in love with him and beamed when she showed us her rings. Somehow I feel that he lacks the warm human qualities which are important in a mar riage. Twice in the lasl few months she has come to work with i black eye and once with a swol len lip. She said she fell down the stairs, bumped into a cup board etc., etc. Her disposition is no longer sunny. She seems depressed. Everyone has noticed a marked change. I suspect her husband Is the cause of her un- happiness. I want to help her. What can I do'.' A FRIEND Dear Friend: Your silence dur ing these difficult times is un doubtedly very much appreciated. She'll open up only if she feels comfortable about It. Until then say nothing. Dear Ann Landers: I'll bet your readers are sick of hearing com plaints from women about my husband's mother." Well, this let ter is going to be different. My husband's mother hasn't bothered me in years. She died in 1954. It's his father I can't stand. Since he moved into this same apartment building there is no such thing as privacy. He has a key to our front door and barges in at any hour of the day or night. He has dinner here regu larly and often brings some stum ble-bum or trampy bar-fly. He uses foul language in front of our children and slips them money behind our backs. I could write a book but I think you have the picture. My hus band says he can't tell his dad to stay away. Besides, he points out, the rent here is very reason able and we are close to every thing. What s the answer? GET TING CRAZY Dear Getting: You're close to everything all right including a nervous collapse. .Even if you could ! in the Building fref would bOtoo blamed expensive in terms of your mental health. O a Is to move. Once Hfe a I IMtr building you I torWilk ow kouse rules. It taaal Ik fw. tepcciM ami a oyv way life. Coomairi to Cut Certrel bi: Twu- bay frtorf has a one track mM om4 from your de- acrHrtitti tin traffic is very light. Drap turn mi fiatf a yoaag man triiM iatsas are mare like yours, Are you tempted to smoke be- cauae the crowd does? If so, send for Ann Landers' boeklet, "Teenage Smoking," enclosing with your request 10 cents in coin and a 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 self-addressed envelope. By Ikdef j (ommunihj. 1; ; (Calendar j FREDRIC BEN DICK IN A- EDDIE . MARCH GAZZARA CLARK BALIN ALBERT What these men' know about life... What their wornn discover -about lev... St hm apart from all othars! PHYLLIS LOVE TODAY , COWARD ANDREWS ALINE MacMAHON o OOOHW5MN 6:45 WEDNESDAY MIGRANT MEETING, Tulelake City Hall, 8 p.m. Organizations and churches that have participat ed in past migrant nurseries are asked to send representatives. CARNATION CLUB, 7:30 p.m. home of Mrs. Shirley Crawford 1220 Homedale Road. FIRST METHODIST CHURCH Stewardship and Finance Commis sion meeting, 7:30 p.m., church parlor. , EVERGREEN GARDEN CLUB, 7:30 p.m., home of Mrs. Otto Claw son. 2827 Summers Lane, peren nial sale. ' BEGINNERS SQUARE DANCE CLASS, 8 p.m., Merry Mixers Hail in Pelican City, further informa tion, call TU 4-9967. OREGON NURSES ASSOCIA TION, health center, 7:30 p.m LOST RIVER GRANGE, 8 p.m. Olene. THURSDAY FREMONT JUNIOR HIGH SCHOOL PTA, 2:30 p.m., auditori um. All parents invited. MIDLAND HEC, 10:30 a.m., fair grounds, potluck, members bring water colors. MARY CIRCLE First Presby- tcrian Church luncheon, 1 p.m., church dining room. LADIES AUXILIARY Canton Crater No. 7, 8 p.m., IOOF Hall, practice for inspection. OREGON FEDERATION GAR DEN CLUB executive board meet ing, Klamath District, 10:30 a.m., home of Mrs. Lane Smith, Green- springs Drive, members bring sack lunch. KLAMATH COUNTY DEMO CRATIC COMMITTEE, 7:30 p.m., Circuit Court Room. ecret EDWARDS AFB, Calif. IUPD- A "by guess or &j gosh" ride a trouble-beset X15 rocket plane Tuesday earned 40-year-old! Joe Walker a new man-controlled speed record of 3,645 miles hour. It was a dandy," Walker grinned after flashing over the Mojave Desert at better than five times the speed of sound despite mechanical troubles that logically could have cancelled his flight, walker, making nw sevenui! flight in the stubby research plane that is designed to investi gate the fringe of space, broke the old mark set by Air Force Maj. Robert White June 23 in the same plane. But it wasn't easy. Walker, senior national space agency pilot on the project, had just been dropped, in the X15, from the wing of a B52 bomber flying at 45,000 feet over Beatty, Nev. He pushed the throttle all the way forward, the craft's 57, 000-pound thrust engine screaming with power. Then a red light showed in the cramped cockpit, telling Walker that fuel pressure to the engine was too low. He shoved the throt tle back 50 per cent. The red light stayed on. Walker quickly assayed the sit uation and pushed the throttle all the way forward again. "I was hungry," Walker joking ly explained later. "I figured the chances of getting something to eat at Mudd Lake (an emergency landing area) were pretty bad, MISIB.WAKA, Ind. (API Mishawaka police were somewhat hampered today in their search lor t9 stolen car the descriptiift C, na&auieu uuuriiidiiun. Th m;ccinn a it n iiu:4 MnrlAl the details of which are supposed io be lop secret until the new line is introduced next week. Dealer Jim Hammes hid the car behind a billboard near his agency, tryiflg to keep the secret. When he looked for it Tuesday night it was gone. Kim Lewder Cativictttl TALLADEGA, Ala. (UP! I- A Ku Klux Klan leader, charged with eight other men with strip ping and Hogging a while couple wim a learner strap, was convict ed Tuesday of assault with intent to commit murder. Attorneys for Thomas Jackson Graham, 37, Sylacauga, Ala., tex tile worker, were expected to ap peal the verdict which carries a maximum sentence of 20 years. Sentencing was scheduled for Sept. 22. Khrushchev 'Bluffer' Nixon Tells Legion DENVER UP! Former Vice President Richard M. Nixon told the American Legion Tuesday night Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev "docs not want a set tlement of the Berlin crisis." But Nixon, speaking to .us10th American Legion convention, said he docs not believe there v ill be war over Berlin, or over any oth er area of the world "if Khrush chev and the Communists have to take the initiative." Calling the Soviet leader a "bluffer," Nixon said he also isl a man who never acts without considering the consequences, and that he is deterred from war by "greater problems than we have." The 1960 Republican candidate for president called for firmness to keep the Russian bluff from working. Khrushchev's purpose, he said, is to negotiate a settlement only if it is a victory for him.". The United States and its Al lies, Nixon said, must rid the So- Teacher Lunch Period Talked SALEM (AP) The state Board of Education Tuesday adopted a regulation aimed 'at getitng duty-free lunch periods for more Oregon school teachers. It tightened up the regulation to insure an average 30 minute, duty-free lunch period in all schools of the state except the one-teacher schools. Gene's College Campus fashion tips Ivy League SPORT SIIIHTS Button down collars, muted tones, long tails, narrow waist ... the four points that mark a better Ivy League shirt. And Gene's collection of sport shirts is the very best . . , Arrow, McGregor, DiVinci and Lan cer. All sleeve lengths, sizes. Select yours now. lo 7.95 6th ond Main . Fine Bronds Plus S&H Green Stamps viels of the notion that we are not willing to risk war or "the result will be either defeat or war." He lauded the administration's Berlin policy in this regard, saying "certainly the policy of strength and firmness that President Ken nedy has adopted is the only policy that can save freedom and keep the peace at the same time." Nixon said he was somewhat disturbed by the emphasis on Ber lin, however, and the attitude by many that other important areas are "peripheral." Soot from burned butter was used for sore eyes by the an cient Greeks and Romans. BEEFEATER BEEFEATER ':l '""iwiw" the imported: English Gin : that doubles; your martini '. pleasure Unequalled since XSIO BEEFEATER GIN 94 PROOF 100 GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS K0BRAN0 CORPORATION . NEW YORK I, N. Y. Bomb Cellar Not Safe DAYTON, Ohio (AP) - A Day ton man planned lo build a nu clear blast shelter. The original design was pro duced for testing at the Nevada proving grounds. Nuclear engi neers claimed it would withstand five times the pressure of an atomic blast and keep out gamma rays and fallout. Its estimated cost was above $2,500. The resident hired a contractor. An engineer approved the plans. A 17-foot pit was dug in his back yard. Then he applied to Mnntgemtry logger Dies ALFAY, Ore. (AP) - Kay- id W. Arp, SI, former Walla Walla. Wash., ptlice officer, died famtey fitan injuries received in lKnl! accident near this north eastern Oregon community. Klamath F.tfii. oton Serving Southern Oregon and Northern Can term Publiihtd aiiv (except Sat.) and Sunday by Klamath Publiihing Company U Main at eDinde Phone TUxedo 4-111) W. B. SWEETLANO, PuehiMr entered at iKVfVdau matter at tha PHl office at kVtmih Fain. Oregon, on Auuit 20. 106. under act ol Can flrfu. March X tin. Second-clais Mir age pid at Klamath Feili. Oregon, and at additional mailing otticet. 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