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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 31, 1961)
Co fowununity TUESDAY SWEET ADELINES, 8 p.m., Willard Hotel Pine Grove Room. Visitors welcome. WEDNESDAY " MIDLAND GRANGE regular meeting, 8 p.m., Midland. Officer election. RUMMAGE SALE, 9 a.m., Clyde's Towing. 734 Klamath Ave-' nue, Kappa Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi. : BUENA VISTA HOME EXTEN. tlON, 10 a.m., fairgrounds. "Rec Firffn Gets Territory ; SALEM (AP) Oregon Public Utility Commissioner Jonel C. Hill Monday made the first grant of exclusive allocation of territory to en electric utility. ' The grant, made passible under a 1961 law, was to Columbia Basin Electric Cooperative, Hepp- ner. ' It was given the right to serve all customers in Morrow and Gil. liam counties north of the WUlam. ctte Base Line, east of a north- south line midway between Arling ton and Willow, south of the Columbia River, end west of Boardman. . Part of the Boeing space age! Industrial park is in the allocation.! ; The co-op serves 870 customers. : Pacific Power & Light Co. bor ders the area on the west, and Umatilla Electric Co-op Associa tion on the north and east. - By granting the allocation, Hill eliminated the possibility of com petition within the area covered by the order. stories of Pacific The drama, the humor, the progress of the great . land we live In i told by master storyteller . NELSON OLMSTED A radio presentation of PACIFIC POWER & LIGHT COMPANY MON. WED. FRI. KAGO KFLW, 12:05 p.m. 5:15 p.m.' DID YOU SAY I CAN I SAVE MONEY ON 1 HOME INSURANCE? I Get the facts about money saving home insurance . . . and easy payment plans NOWI Ask us. No obligation. MIDLAND EMPIRE INSURANCE AGENCY 1006 Main St. Phone TU 4-417 Bill McKlbbin and CUm Lrnuaur business is when you go UNION CITY OF PORTLAND " "5 QahndaJi reation For Family." the Individual and GOLDEN AGE CLUB. 12:30 p.m potluck. Klamath Falls Audi torium. KLAMATH AIR SEARCH AND RESCUE UNIT, 7:30 p.m. Com mittee reports. MAVERICK SQUARE DANCE, 8 p.m., Summers Lane Hall. Wom en bring refreshments. KLAMATH ARCHERS, 6:30 p.m, Twyla Ferguson School gym Regular potluck and business meeting. ZULEIMA NILE CLUB, 1 p.m luncheon, Wincma Hotel. Mothers Singers program. Bring jellies and jams for Thanksgiving Box. THURSDAY RUMMAGE SALE, 9 a.m., Clyde's Towing, 734 Klamath Ave nue. Kappa Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi. GREENSPRINGS GARDEN CLUB, 10 a.m., B. M. Antle home, Ashland Highway. Sack lunch. , KLAMATH STAMP AND COIN CLUB, 8 p.m, 623 Main (up stairs). Professors Brief Group SALEM (AP) Two college! political 'science professors will brief the Oregon Constitutional Revision Commission Friday In Portland. Professors Charles McKinley, Portland State College, and Rich ard Frost, Reed College, will dis cuss the history of constitrtional revision eiforts in Oregon and the broad Issues involved. Thomas L. Scanlon, Oregon AFL-CIO research and education director, also is scheduled to tes tify. He has indicated that labor generally Is satisfied with the present Constitution. Rep. George Layman, R-New- berg, commission chairman, said other persons and organizational! representatives also may testify. The executive subcommittee of the commission will meet, follow ing the full commission meeting. The next full commission meet ing is scheduled for Nov. 17 in! Salem. Arizona Holds Klamath' Man The sheriff's office of Casa Grande, Ariz., reported Saturday to city police that they have T. H. Jackson,' 1317 Adams Street, In custody on a charge of "contribut ing to the delinquency of minors." A teletype message: from Ari zona said the charge Involved Jackson's two young daughters. City police checked and found that Mrs. Jackson left for Arizona last week with five other children. Yi . , Sea Friendly CLEM LESUEUR your local Independent agtnt a It' TOWEL PLEASURE PACIFIC'S DOMELINER FAMILY FARES save 4 you real money when you f StA I ; take your wif andor v w family along. Vw- s i-'T pry ST?ffl Union Pacific Railroad o PAGE t HERALD AND Talented Pianist Opens Community Concert Series Here November 4 Only a glance at the tightly packed tours of Leon Fleisher would reveal the high caliber of I he young pianist who opens the Klamath Community Concert As sociation season Saturday, Nov. 4. Today the 33-year-old piano ar tist divides his time between sold out tours of North and South America and Europe. An exam ple of his popularity with the music loving Latins is that in Buenos Aires there are a music competition, a symphony orches tra and a concert series named after him. Fleislicr's performance at I p.m. Saturday in Mills Auditor! um will be backed by a career which began when he was 4 years old. Like many other chil dren, he gave his first public re cital when he was 6. , But when he was 10 years old, he was auditioned by the late great Artur Schnahcl. Schnabel broke his long standing rule nev Churches Back UNICEF Appeal Halloween Night More than 75 Klamath Falls youths sporting bright orange and black UNICEF official tags will start knocking on neighborhood doors Halloween Night at 6:30. Sponsored by the Klamath Gounty Council of Churches in conjunction with the Klamath Falls Jaycecs, the children will State Eyes Ration Plan OLYMPIA AP)-"Immediately after attack warning, the card reads, "a freeze order issued by the governor will prohibit sale of all consumer commodities.' The message is printed on food and gasoline rationing cards which soon will be distributed to the families of Washington state. Washington will be the first state in the nation to set up the emergency rationing plan, ordered rjy uov. itoseuinl as a civil defense measure. Lisle Pratt, deputy state civil defense director, said Tuesday registration and ration cards will be in the hands of oil 39 county auditors this week. The auditors, who will carry out the program, will send the regis tration forms to the estimated, 760,000 heads of households in the stato next week, Pratt said The families will be asked to fill out the cards and return them to the auditors. Only cost to regis ter will be a four-cent stamp. Ration cards good for anywhere in the state during an emergency will then be mailed to the house holds, Pratt said. If an emergency were declared, Pratt said, food and gasoline ra tioning would be Imposed by local and slate government for about four weeks, or until a federal plan is set up. Choir Chooses Klamath Girl NAMPA. Idaho (Special) Mona Chenoweth, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Chenoweth of 1B54 Port land Street, Klamath Falls, has been selected for membership in' the crusader Choir of Northwest Nazarene College here. The choir will tour the North west's college campuses April 13 23, ll2. Among their appearances in Nampa, the 33-voice singing group will perform Handel's "Mes siah" during the Christmas sea son. II NEWS, Klamath Falls, Ore. er to accept a pupil under the age of 16. From then on young be collecting nickels, dimes and quarters for the United Nation's Children's Fund which aids the needy in 100 countries. Participants will include First Methodist Church Youth Fellow ship, Klamath Union High School Future Homemakers, Church of the Brethren Youth Fellowship, Explorer Scouts from Post 10 and Boy Scouts from Troop 10. Others are expected to join thei "trick or treat" Tuesday night collection, but all will be wearing the official badges and carrying! the official containers, according! to John Heilbronner, chairman Burglaries Under Probe Four burglaries were under in vestigation Monday morning by city police. Places attacked by burglars over the weekend included the Moose Lodge, 1010 Pine Street Pacific Fruit arid Produce Co. 810 Spring Street; Home Lumber Co., 2384 South Sixth Street, and Signal Oil Co., 2300 South Sixth Street. Forty bottles of whisky, some candy and cigarettes were stolen. from the Moose Lodge by burglars who climbed through an unlocked back window and jimmied a door open, value ot tne liquor was: about $300. The entry was re ported by Ervin Carr, 4423 Win ter Street. Burglars crawled through a broken loft window of Pacific Fruit and Produce Co., went into the office and took $44.53 from an unlocked petty cash safe. Ken Thomason discovered the burgla ry. A hasp was piled from a rearl door of the tool shed at Home Lumber Co., but nothing appeared to have been taken, according to Bill Meade, company owner. George May of Signal Oil Co. reported that someone broke the lock off the front door of the building, entered and stole 1V4 rolls of four-cent stamps. Police listed no suspects in any of the cases. Police Warn Bird Shooters Two young brothers w warned by city police Saturday morning after they were seen shooting pigeons beneath the South Sixlh Street Overpass. The brothers, ages 10 and 12, were warned by City Juvenile Of ficer Ray Howard and released to their parents. The county ju venile department was also noti fied. Shooting inside the city is a violation of a city ' ordinance. NOW YOU KNOW By I'nllfd Press International Abraham Lincoln wrote five copies of his Gettysburg address. including two drafts, before giving It. One of the three later copies sold for $54,000 in 1!H9. It trait) anbSfto Klamath Faita. Oraoon Publlthtd daily (txeeot Sat ) and Sunday serving soutnam uraoon and Northarn California by Klamath PulMiiMno Company Main at Ftplanadt Phona Tifttxn vtni W. B. IWeiTLANO, Puftllihaf Fnttrad at aaetmd elau mattar at DOtl Mica at Klamath Fall. Oraeo en Augutt 50, IfOA. undar act of Can Orana, March X Sacond-clasi pott- aga paid at Klamath Fail. Oragon. and at atwmonai mailing emcaa. SUBSCRIPTION RAT 65 Carrlar 1 Mantn 1 in 4 Month! DIM 1 Yaar Ml. 00 Mall in Advanc I Month $ l,H 4 Months 0ft 1 Year 1 1 100 Camar and Daatart Waattdav irfunday, eepy 198 UN) (BO PRtSk INteANATIONAL ASSOC 11 SO PRPS5 AUO'T bureau op circulation ScMcrlhart no racaivtna daltvary inair Mara id and hawa. piaata phona Cna CarDantar, Circulation Manafar TUad 44111 Mfora 9 P M. i : AJ I LEON FLEISHER O O Tudar, October SI, 1961 e a Fleisher's life was one of excite ment, exacting performances and careful, prodding hours of prac tice. His debut with orchestra lion came as early as 1943, when he performed with the San Fran cisco Orchestra and a year later with the New York Philharmonic. Success and acclaim have come from many scores. None but a top flight miwa artist would have been selected by a conduc tor of George Szell's stature for solo performance with orchestral of the demanding five Beethoven Piano Concerti. Fleisher and Szell, with the Cleveland Orchestra, re corded the monumental works. The concerti for Epic and the many other recordings he has made for Epic and Columbia, have added greatly to his fame. That Fleisher has earned the respect and appreciation of pro fessional musicans and fans from many parts of the world guaran tees him well on the road to be ing a "people's pianist." In Europe his tours of France, Germany, Spain, Italy: Belgium, Holland1 and Scandinavia include annual performances with most of the major orchestras and at the leading summer music festivals, Besides performances with the previously mentioned three Amer ican symphonies he has appeared with the Boston, Philadelphia, and Chicago orchestras. Milk Fees To Be Cut SALEM (AP) - The state Agri culture Department said Monday that fees paid by distributors for administration of the state Milk Stabilization Act will be reduced Wednesday 2'4 cents per hundred pounds of milk. J. M. Short, department direc tor, reduced the fees on the rec ommendation of state Milk Stabili zation Administrator Kenneth W. Sawyer. The formal order was filed with the secretary of state, and carries an emergency clause to make it effective Nov. 1. This action resulted because Portland-Salem . area dairymen refused a proposed marketwide milk marketing pool, which would have replaced the present distribu tor pools if it had been accepted. Short said a market pool would have required more staff to ad-J minister the law, and administra tion would have cost more. unless unanticipated legal on other costs develop, Sawyer said, it may be possible to eliminate the fee entirely during the last few months of 1062 before the law expires at the end of the year. Ao rif under IH li ill br tidmiilrd mtrjv nrcomiwnird hv mi ' niltill. U -YOUNG LOVE... I , Its unrelentini moments, jf" I Its traies and splendors! Sample Was A,nl'YfjC( Of Ttelf HfeSlt ' For Male With Linev. .. By ANN LANDERS Dear Ann Landers: I'm a girl, 18. who graduated from a small town high school and came to the city to work. I got a job as a receptionist with a big company where I meet a lot of people sspecially sales men. Three weeks a very attractive guy came in. He seemed awfully refined so I accepted a dinner date with him. He took me to a lovely place and we had a few drinks and dined and danced. He said he was a lover of classical mu sic and asked if I had any rec ords. To make a long story short he came to my place. We had some more drinks and he recited poet ry and talked about Albert Schweitzer and Zen and things like that. I hate to admit it but I got weak and let my heart rule my head. He promised to phone in a few days to make a date for the weekend. Well, almost three weeks have gone by and I haven't heard from him. I can t believe he was giving me a line. Some thing terrible must have happened to him. What do you think? i WORRIED Dear Worried: Something ter rible happened all right. But it happened to you not him. The picture usually looks dif ferent through male eyes. He gave you a big 'pitch and you went for It. Why should he come back? The sample was ample, Dear Ann Landers: The fellow next door Is seven months young er than I am. We grew up togeth er and I have no romantic in terest in him at all. He is like a relative. I'm a high school sophomore now and he is just a lowly fresh man. He has already invited me to go to the Christmas dance with. him. I don't want to accept. Besides being like a relative, he's a lousy dancer. My mother says I must be con siderate of his feelings. I also realize that some time in the fu ture I may be stuck for a date and he would come in mighty handy. So, you see, I'm on the HORNS OF A DILEMMA Dear Horns: Level with the guy and tell him exactly how you feel. If he's willing to serve as an Patrons Meet BONANZA Parents and Pa trons met recently with new of ficers in charge. Presiding was Dorothy Smith, president, assisted by Virginia Hartley, vice presi dent; Lenore Pederson, secreta ry and Beverly Roberts, treasur er. Four-H awards were given by Francis Skinner and Al Hasle- backer. .','VVi NATALIE WOOD PAT KlNGLE AUDREY CHRISTIE BARBARA LODEN ZOHRA LAMPERT vis Tr", WARREN BEATTY tNDS TONITtl 7MPP FAMILY' S 'OLE REX' emergency parachute fine. In ex change for his generosity, teach him how to dance. Dear Ann Landers: My husband used to be a heavy drinker. He hit bottom and I had just about given up hope when a friend took him to an A.A. meeting. He's been dry for almost five years no and I can't tell you what a dif ference H has made in my life. Tom works in a warehouse where the men are constantly drinking on the job. Every night when he comes home from work he tells me how they pass the bottle around. When he refuses they kid him about "being afraid of his old lady." I love my husband and I want to keep him well and sober. What can I do?-MRS. TOM Dear Mrs. Tom: Booze fighters need constant encouragement Keep his ego bolstered by telling him how much you love him and how proud you are of his victory. Encourage him to go to A.A. meetings regularly. When be of- fers his hand to help lift a fallen brother as he was helped he gains strength for his own fight. Are you templed to smoke be cause the crowd does? If so, send for Ann Landers' booklet, "Teenage Smoking," enclos ing with your request 10 cents in com 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 news paper enclosing a stamped, self- addressed envelope. The Greatest High Adventure Ever Filmed! , lit!! U If o a... , . B,i i.i.tA in i Mna.;. .. . To sustain the tremendous suspense. you the utmost enioyment, e urge "The wins oi nivarone irom no one will tie seated During the last COIUMBU PICTURES presents GREGORY PECK DAVID NIVEN ANTHONY QUINN hCARLRJKEMAIS ' siANLEY MB: ANTHONY (HWlE-pJE PAPAS- G1A SOMA JAMES DARREN cm fost9Nli,l fDiuimi iiommn liinliliiliifiiil cnGs PiE! IWWSON row Harmless noiiaay NEW YORK (AP) Whatever happened to the eld-fashioned Halloween? This is the night bats fly, witch es cackle weirdly as they soar through the sky on jet-fast broom. sticks, and skeletons dance in their bones in the streets, pursued by red devils with rubber pitch forks. Your doorbell may ring many times. If you open it you are likely to see a group of small costumed monsters, each holding up a con tainer. "Trick or treat!" they yell in chorus. Treat, if you please, you answer, and if you hand them a' dime each or some pieces of candy, the mollified monsters go on to the next door, usually fol lowed at an unobtrusive distance by a cautious parent. But what happens if you reply, "Trick!" Probably nothing. The tiny monsters look uncertainly at each other, then go away. They are so used to getting treats they don t know any tricks to play on householder to force him into granting their demands. I don't know when this "trick: or treat" ultimatum got started,! but a generation ago it wasn't so popular in many parts of the country. Halloween wasn't an evening of harmless fun but the most dread ed night of the year to grownups. Children were generally more obedient to their elders in those days, but one night of the 363 and to live you to see' E , tne beginning. ( zu minutes, tf . t sii; k aiwx - . - -"xt. m-t :a.s:..w uf promisf, is prjbMy iht most rivaling molioii piclurf you um fnrr scc II 1 1 'J ' they threw off the halters and roamed like wild things.' The kids then didn't seek treats from adults. On Halloween they wanted to play tricks. They were one-night rebels, out to ridicule and humiliate the grownups. They were in full revolt against authority- In the farm areas robust teen agers took a particular joy in pushing over outhouses. In the cities they spilled garbage pails on front porches. They soaped store windows, cars, home win dows. They painted or chalked defiant messages on the steps or sidewalks of "the old crank" who lives in every neighborhood. The old-fashioned Halloween was a nuisance and an annoyance to most adults, a time of vexation and often of expense, as some of the pranks were costly if not downright dangerous. Halloween now like the Fourth of July has been gentled into a safer and more harmless holiday. The little demons prefer to be bribed rather than play tricks. There are those who feel this is because grownups over the years have wisely learned to channel the excess of juvenile spirits into less harmful forms' of fun. This might be giving grownups credit for more wisdom than they de served. Possibly a better explanation: Why should children rebel any longer on Halloween since the little demons already have the adult world under their thumb the rest of the year anyway? DOORS OPEN 6:30 This. - ' HQ mm 1 A m ! .VI :o