Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, October 26, 1961, Image 2

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    Regular Eccrrirny teef? Te Cfetf lf.S; Goals
WASHINGTON (AP) Regular
conferences of top civilian and
government leaders to chart an
nual goals for the entire Ameri
can economy soon will be pro
posed to President Kennedy by his
labor-management advisers.
The idea is to suggest limits and
guidelines in such sectors as gov
ernment spending, business in'
vestment and profits and wages
and prices, in the hope the rec
ommendations will be followed to
insure stability and steady growth.
The plan is to put more per
suasiveness behind the "hold the
line" appeals voiced by Kennedy
and his recent presidential ,pred'
ecessors while still avoiding a
controlled economy.
While everyone would remain
free to make his own economic
decisions, it is felt that all would
become more morally bo u n d
to act responsibly within the pub
licly stated economic goals.
The proposal for such annual
goal-setting conferences is under
stood to be contained in a draft
report of the wage-price subcom
mittee of Kennedy's Labor-Man
agement' Advisory Committee.
It is one of several sets of rec
ommendations due to be submit'
ted to Kennedy when the 21-man
advisory group, made up of pub
lic, business and labor represen
tatives, meets here again late
next month.
The advisory panel, headed by
OPEN 6:45
SHOW 7:00
THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY
ALL ABOUT A SCRAMBLED EGGHEAD,
FLUBBER (the GOO that Flew)
FLYING FLIVVERS! .
RED MacMURRAY NANCY OLSON KEENAN WYNN 'TOMMY KL1
but h mm mm
FURY...on the Stae-enun-h Run
I'JesTboiM
wanhU3loh . STEELE DANII
Secretary of Labor Arthur J.
Goldberg, has four other subcom
mittees readying reports for the
White House on such subjects as
bargaining and industrial peace,"
"economic growth and unemploy
ment," "productivity and higher
standards of living and policies
to insure American products are
competitive in world markets."
Prof. George W. Taylor of the
University of Pennsylvania is
chairman of the subcommittee on
"sound wage and price policies."
Members include such business
men as Henry Ford II and labor
leaders George Meany and Walter
Reuther.
The wage-price report is also
said to affirm the principle that
wages and salaries, including the
fringe benefits such as pensions,
insurance and so on, should move
roughly in step with productivity.
But it' will stress the principle
cannot be adhered to rigidly in
every case.
The report headed for Kenne
dy's desk next month also is un
derstood to suggest that labor and
management avoid using up all
productivity gains that some
prices must be brought down to
share fruits of greater efficiency
with the consumer.
If the proposal to hold annual
goal-setting economic conferences
is put into effect the result inev
ilably will be greater government
planning but planning depending
upon voluntary rather than com
pulsory compliance, and planning
accomplished as a joint govern
ment-civilian enterprise.
THURSDAY
SQUARE VANCE INSTRUC
TION. 7:30-9:30 p.m., YMCA
Open to all beginners.
2
PATRICIA OWENS DINISE OUCa
CESAR ROMERO - M&RCtA DEAN
BsM
m
mt If MIT tt MM
uf tun; a m nt tuu
W
MICHMS S8fr-
A
WESLEY AN SERVICE GUILD
devotional meeting, 7:30 to 8 p.m.
First Methodist Church.
WW I BARRACKS No. 929 and
Auxiliary, 8 p.m.. VFW Hall.
KLAMATH MINERAL CLUB
7:30 p.m.. Klamath Auditorium
Rock auction.
LADIES AUXILIARY CANTON
CRATER No. 7, 8 p.m., IOOF
Hall.
' FRIDAY
PUBLIC CARD PARTY. 8 D.m
i-lfv lihrnrv basement. Soonsored
by World War I Barracks Auxil
iary. Prizes, reiresnmenis. ,
RIVERSIDE School PTA Car
nival, 7:30 p.m., school gym. Lots
of new games. Public Invited.
RUMMAGE SALE, 9 a.m..
Clyde's Towing. Lioness Club for.
Eye Program."
LADIES ENCAMPMENT AUX
ILIARY, 8 p.m., IOOF Hall.
SCHOOL CARNIVAL, 7 p.m.,
Joseph Conger School PTA, school
gym.
RUMMAGE SALE, 9 a.m.. Ma
sonic Temple. Naomi Shrine, No.
5, OES.
JOB'S DAUGHTERS, BETHEL
No. el, rummage sale, 9 a.m. to
4:30 p.m. 1116 Main (former Re
liable Cleaners).
RUMMAGE SALE, 8:30 a.m. to
4:30 p.m.. Reorganized LDS an
nex, Ninth and Plum. ;
RAMBLIN' SQUARES BEGIN-
NER8, 8 p.m., 4668 Frieda. Wom
en bring potluck dishes.
' ALOHA PAST MATRONS. 1
p.m. dessert luncheon, Masonic
Temple.
FRIENDSHIP COURT NO. II,
Order of the Amaranth, 8:30 p.m.
ways and means dinner; 8 p.m.
initiation and official visit' of
grand royal matron. Scottish Rite
Temple.
CUB PACK NO. 10. 8 p.m
Shasta School gym. Pack Cubs
and families.
MOOSE FISH FRY, 6 to 8
p.m., LOOM No. 1108 for mem
bers and guests. Moose Hall, 1010
Pine.
SATURDAY
RUMMAGE SALE, 8:30 a.m.
Piggly Wiggly Building. Fairview
School PTA.
RUMMAGE SALE, 9 a.m. to 5
p.m., Clyde a Towing Service
Chapter CF of PEO Sisterhood
sponsors.
VFW DANCE. 9 p.m. to 1 a m
VFW Hall. Louie and Ozzie, mu
sicians.
RUMMAGE SALE, 8 a.m. to S
p.m., 1116 Main. Sponsored by
Business and Professional Women.
LOOM MASQUERADE DANCE,
10 p.m., Moose Hall, 1010 Pine.
Breakfast served by WOTM No.
467 afterwards.
MERRY MIXERS MASQUER
ADE, 8 p.m.. Pelican City Hall.
Square dancers invited. Prizes for
best costumes.
MOOSE DISTRICT 4 MEET,
p.m. LOOM Hall, 1010 Pine.
RUMMAGE SALE, 8:30 a.m. to
12 noon. Reorganized LDS annex,
Ninth and Plum.
Doort
Open
:45
TODAY
A motion picture that delves without compromise into the
if 1 i XL..., ii .1 ...... -hi
inner loneliness ana nungers uiu lie ueeii wiuiiii us ui.
if -NPfclSjl
Men
flAUL !.'-. PIPER
niE liMSTICR I.
OuUI I
1
-"""tljlPACorM
, . yz. a r- Ay
RAMBLIN' SQUARES, travel to
annual Night Owl Dance in Ash
land. Regular dance cancelled.
LADIES. POSTAL CLERKS
RUMMAGE sale, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m
Clyde's Towing.
HALLOWEEN DANCE, VFW
HALL, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m., VFW
Hall, Members and invited guests.
RUMMAGE SALE, Xi Delia.
Beta Sigma Phi, 9 a.m. to S p.m.,
Clyde's Towing, 734 Klamath Ave
VFW HALLOWEEN DANCE, 9
p.m. to 1 a.m., VFW Hall. Mem
bers and their guests. Music by
Louie and uzzle.
TURKEY DINNER, POMONA
GRANGE annual, 5 to 8 p.m., Mid
land Grange Halli Public invited
Homemade pies.
PEO RECIPROCITY LUNCH
EON, 12 noon, Pelican Party
Room. Airs. Vimala Paulus, PEO
scholarship winner, speaker.
NAOMI SHRINE NO. FIVE
Rummage Sale, 9 a.m., Masonic
Temple.
PANCAKE AND HAM DINNER.
8 to 8 p.m., IOOF Hall. Odd Fel
lows for United Nations Youth Pil
grimage Benefit.
SUNDAY
CATHOLIC DAUGHTERS. No.
1295, 9:30 a.m., Winema Hotel.
Initiation breakfast, immediately
after 8 a.m. Mass.
JACK POT BARREL RACING.
2 p.m.. Fairgrounds. Final day.
Entries close at 2 p.m.
Ann Discovers How
To Retrieve Mail
m
By ANN LANDERS
Dear Readers: The wet noodle
won't do this time. I will take, in
stead, 20 belts with a full mall
bag.
It -is indeed
possible to re
trieve a letter
once it has been
mailed. 11 u n
dreds of readers
havi told me so.
It hardly seems
worth the effort, but it can be
done, and here's how:
If the letter Is registered you
must go to the post office and
ill out withdrawal form 385S. If
the letter is not registered, form
1509 will do.
You must state on the form the
approximate size of the envelope,
the hour and date it was mailed,
where you deposited it, and why
you want It back. You must also
agree to pay for any and all ex
penses incurred In retrieving the
letter.
Thank you, dear readers, for
letting me know, I feel .as if I've
landed In the Dead Letter Office,
Dear Ann Landers: I married
Lloyd with my eyes wide open
I could have had a go-getter and
a good earner. But I preferred a
good-looker and a smooth dancer.
I've had to work from the day
we married.
I love to dance with Lloyd bill
I never get the chance. What hap
pened at a recent company party
is a good example. The girls mar
ried to the substantial types come
over and say "Do you mind if
I borrow your husband? Mine
can t dance.
Photo Man
Testifies
PORTLAND (AP) - A former
commercial photographer said in
Portland's mail fraud trial Wed
nesday that a firm he worked for
in 1958 photographed 2,788 auto
mobile accidents that year.
The witness, Rodney M. Ail-
away, testified for the defense in
the trial of 10 defendants ac
cused of staging fqke automobile
accidents to defraud insurance
companies.
AUaway said his firm monitored
the accidents from police radio
calls, without opposition from law
enforcement agencies.
Such monitoring no longer Is
condoned. Allawav said,
Of the total number of acci
dents photographed, 11 pictures
were ordered during 1958 by Phil
lip Weinstein, Portland attorney
who is one of the defendants,
Allaway testified.
Dwight Schwab, defense counsel
for Weinstoin, said the filming of
these accidents was well known
and Weinstein was one of many'
who had access to the photo
graphs.
Because these pictures were
available, Schwab said, earlier
testimony by Leland Decgan,
Bend, was "ridiculous."
"Weinstein is accused, by Dee-
gan of having told Deegan to go
out and bash up the rear end of
his car," Schwab said. Deegan
had testified that Weinstein told
him to back his car into a tree
because it was not dam
aged enough by an accident.
' I feel like answering. "My hus
band isn't much at working. May
I borrow S5 from your husband?"
When I complain to Lloyd he is
just flattered. What can I do?
Jean
Pear Jean: ' A company party
is the last place a woman should
expect to dance with her own hus
band. Especially If he's good.
Plan on dinner out every few
weeks, and select a place with
music. This should solve at least
one of your problems.
Dear Ann Landers: I just read
Darlenes letter about her mother
reminding her to do little things
and how she resented it bitterly.
I have two teen-age daughters and
I know how they hate to be re
minded. But this is what happens
unless I ride herd on them:
They put the ice tray back in
the refrigerator with no water in
it. They pull out the plug but they
don't wash the bathtub. Their,
soiled clothes gr into the drawers
instead of the clothes hamper. The
towels are bunched up on the racks
instead of being spread out to dry.
They forget' to take the dog out
at night and she has an accident
on the rug.
.Speaking as a mother with two
daughters who must be reminded,
I say it's the only way. Otherwise
they wouldn't do one blamed
thing. What do you have to say
to-this, Ann Landers? A Moth
er, Too
Dear Mother: Teen-age girls
who must be reminded to put
water In the Ice trays and to wash
out the bathtub have had pretty
shoddy training.
When a mother must repeat
such simple Instructions hun
dreds of times It Is evidence that
her voice has become like the' bus
that runs by the house. They've
become so used to it, they don't
even hear It anymore.
To learn the difference between
a marriage that "settles down')
and one that 'gets dull,' send,
for Ann Landers' booklet, "What
To Expect From Marriage," en
closing with your request 20 cents
in coin and a long, self-addressed,
stamped envelope. i
Ann Landers will be clad to
help you with your problems. Send
them to her in care of this news
paper enclosing a stamped, self
addressed envelope.
IAGE t-A
HERALD AND NEWS. Klamath Falls, Ore.
Thursday, October 26, 1961-
Demos Strike Back At Ike's Attack
WASHINGTON (AP) - With the
White House silent, four Senate
Democrats struck back today
against an attack by former Pres
ident 'Dwight D. Eisenhower on
Kennedy administration fiscal pol
icies and the Peace Corps.
Senate Democratic Leader Mike
Mansfield of Montana said Eisen
hower was engaging in "campaign
oratory" when he said in New
York Tuesday that the adminis
tration's budget policies are
"shrinking dollars" and that the
Peace Corps is a "juvenile exper
"When the former president
talked about deficits in his purely
political speech," Mansfield said,
"he should have been reminded
that in one year during his ad
ministration the nation had the
highest peacetime deficit in its
history, $12.5 billion.
"I am glad he is willing to ad-
mit that the nation has attained
a state of prosperity. I hope he
recalls that when President Ken
nedy took over from him we were
in a state of recession.
Mansfield said Congress had
given its overwhelming approval
to establishment of the Peace
Corps. He added that he hopes it
will "be given an opportunity to
prove its worth before it is con
demned for purely political reasons."
Sen. Philip A. Hart, D-Mich
said in a separate interview he
was disappointed that Eisenhower
would express critical opinions
about the Peace Corps.
I think he has caused hurt to
a lot of very sincere American
young men and women who are
showing a dedication to their na
tion that ought to be encouraged,"
Hart said.
Sen. Maurine B. Neuberger. D-
Ore., said she thought Eisenhower Peace Corps member be sent to
had "belittled his own position" the moon because that was an
by suggesting sarcastically that a I underdeveloped country.
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Now You Know
By United Press lnlrnUonal
The portrait on the front of the
$100,000 bill is that of Woodrow
Wilson.
Kltmftth Flltt. 6roen
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9:30 a.m. 5:30 p.m.