Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, December 30, 1962, Page 2, Image 2

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    I'-i-: ua
Housing Chief Urges
Lift Of Racial Barrier
: WASHINGTON (UPD- Federal
Housing Administrator Robert C
,7qaver, announcing a "spectacu
lar rise" in the Incomes of non
while persons, has urged removal
of the racial barriers that prevent
them from buying more expensive
homes.
Weaver released Friday a spe
cial study made by the Housing
and Home Finance Agency, based
on the censuses in 1930 and IPSO.
He said it showed a large and
growing demand for housing
among middle-income, nonwhite
urban families a demand that is
not being met.
; In 21 metropolitan areas ana-
hzed, nonwhite incomes rose
sharply. The number of nonwhites
in those areas earning more than
M.000 a year Increased from 59,
QMS in 1949 to 940,000 in 1939.
Rail Crash
Tears Track
-; tly United Press International
TEight cars of a Northern Pa-
cific freight train were derailed
jfliout two miles north of Cen-0-alia,
Wash., Saturday. It was the
Spcond derailment on the NP s
Seattle Portland line within 24
hours, and the third derailment
in the Northwest in the same
period.
. Two NP freight trains travel
ing in opposite directions side
lined each other Friday one
jrdle south of Chchalis, Wash., de
villing eight cars and tearing up
;60p feet of track.
Earlier Friday, three cars of
Spokane, Portland tc Seattle Rf.il
tiy freight train skipped the
trscks 10 miles northwest of Port
land. There were no Injuries in
any of the accidents.
Ooart Own
LAST TIMES TODAY?
Jerry p" 1
lewis's? jay
V7 X
L
Itc
OiuyJHoflfQr'j
Those with incomes over $6,000
rose from 12,050 to 210,156.
The study said the economic ad
vances of middle-income non
whites, and other status Improve
ments, made a significant rise Ln
home ownership during the decade.
But, the study said, there was
a great disparity in tne rate oi
home ownership and value be
tween whites and nonwhites at
comparable economic levels.
Racial restrictions, it said, were
the "important deterrent" to non-
white home ownership, the study
said.
In a forward to the report,
Weaver said "the present study
of nonwhite middle income nous,
ing needs takes on added signifi
cance with the issuance hy the
President of an executive order
on equal opportunity in housing.
"In a society which has chosen
free competition and free enter
prise as the channel for economic
expansion and improvement of liv
ing standards, such a basic com
modity as decent family housing
should be readily available to
every American family.
The extent to which we suc
ceed in improving the housing
conditions of our minority fami
lies will depend upon the imagi
native cooperation of the housing
industry, covcrnment and the
American people," Weaver said
The trend toward more home
ownership among nonwhites
ranged from a 53 per cent in
crease in Atlanta to a 172 per cent
jump in San Francisco.
U if' H;MJ
tA ; ,1
:1 : 'I
Shrine Eyes
Four Cities
For Hospital
SAN FRANCISCO 'UPll-Four
western cities are under con
sideration as the site of a pro
posed $3 million Shrine hospital
to care for as many as 1,700
critically burned children every
vcar. according to George M.
Klcpper. Memphis. Tcnn., im
perial potentate of the Shriners
of North America.
Kleppcr said the cities are San
Francisco. Denver, Portland, and
Los Angeles. The hospital will be
a West Coast bum treatment
center.
Two other regional hospitals arc
going to be constructed, said
Klcpper. who was here for the
Shrine East-West football game.
He said they will be in the Mid
west and in the South or KmI.
STUDIES PROBLEM Labor Secretary W. Willard Wirti
ponders over an answer to a newsman's question at a
longshore strike press conference Saturday in New York
City. Wirtz told the conference that both sides have
agreed to submit a key issue in tho six-day strike (size of
work gangs) to a study group and attempt to writo a
tomporary contract that will reopen struck ports.
UPI Telephoto
Wirtz Resumes Separate
Longshore Strike Talks
NEW YORK IUPP - Labor
Secretary W. Willard Wirtz, over
one obstacle to ending the vio
lence-marked strike that closed
docks from Maine to Texas a
week ago. resumed separate talks
with longshoremen and shippers
Saturday.
Wlrtz said both parties in the
contract dispute agreed to submit
the issue of work gang size to a
study group.
We mean business," Wirtz said
in announcing the agreement after
Friday's joint mceling between
the International Longshoremen's
Association ILA and the New
York Shippers Association
INYSA).
"The interests involved just do
not justify the closure of the East
and Gulf Coast ports. We are go
ing to try to got a settlement
without any further delay.
The main Issues, he said
"nrc two Wiicrs and related
fringe bcnclits, and the length of
Uie contract.
The secretary said the NYSA
bargaining group for 145 stevedore
contractors and stcamslup com
naiiics. has offered a nine-cent
liourly wage Increase in
one-vear contract.
The ILA whose 75,000 members
struck last Sunday, wants a two
vear contract. At one point in
negotiations, the union demanded
an hourly wage boost of 25 cents
the first year and 15 cents the
second.
A spokesman for the NYSA
which wants work gangs cut from
20 to 17 men, said the length of
the study of their size had not
been determined. He said mem
liersliip on the manpower utiliza
lion and job security study com
miltee would be left more or
less in Wirtz' hands." The com
mittee's recommendations would
not be binding.
The ILA has refused to negoti
ate the size of the gangs. It claims
the shippers proposal would throw
5.00C men out of work.
EXCLUSIVE
PRE-RELEASE ENGAGEMENT!
TOMORROW ONLY!
MONDAY, DEC. 31-
Coed Picked
Cotton
- M noun TO UKtb 4 KUBtKI Wlot rtttotrii
ROBERT
SHlRlEY
WELAiNE
a square
from
Nebraska?
lift
wl
I
ar.
? off-beatnik
from
Greenwich
Village?
IT HIST .Jsft
DIDN'T W-
.
H(iUKt...'r
that they would...
that they could...
tho ho, H.HI
TWo
W
j WALTER MIRISCH ROBERT WISE ISOBEL LENNART
STeven 'wnmm WILLIAM GIBSON
1 I'ltf tt
(RtOCOt MSWSiCH
! WltKKAOTXf ltK .... C ...... "
MwuuMuaitisMiit'ititeiM Aimn' 'his lntttmr
Adults $I-2S Unci. !) K'dt I0(
MEMPHIS. Tenn. (LPP-Slielby
Smith. 22. a brown-haired beauty
from Albuquerque. N M , was ch-
en Friday night as King Cotton's
new first lady.
The new 1.! Maid of Cotton
will represent the cotton industry
its good will and fashion am
bassador in the coming year.
Miss Smith already has received
a bachelor's degree in biology and
is now working toward a master's
degree at the University of New
Mexico. She also works part-time
as an office manacer and as a
graduate assistant teaching biolo
gy lab.
I guess my studies will be tem
porarily interrupted." she said.
First alternate in the 23111 anni
versary of the Maid of Colton con
test was blonde Becky Hcntlcy.
!0. Thorshy, Ala , and second al
ternate was green ecd lnthia
Thomas. Memphis.
The other two top hnalisls se
lected by the seven-member judg
ing panel were Susan Elliott, Lub
bock. Tex., and R.ubara Lundcll.
Iing Beach. Calif
Venus Spins
In Reverse,
Report Says
STANFORD. Calif. (L'PH-Thc
planet Venus probably rotates in
a direction opposite from that of
the Earth, a scientist reported
Fridav.
Dr. Richard M. Goldstein said
that experiments made by t h c
California Institute of Technology
.let Propulsion Laboratory at the1
Cioldslone Tracking Station in the
Mojave Desert indicated the back-
wind spin of tlic planet.
lioldslrin made the report to
the American Physical Society
and the American Geophysical
Union, meeting at Stanford Uni
versity in joint session.
He Mid tliat he and H. L. Car
iiciUer bmuiccd radar beams off
the planet between Oct. 1 and
Dec. 17 when it was in close
proximity to the Earth.
Tlie radar signals, "hich re
turned to the Earth in six t'ii
right minutes, indicated that Vc
mis rotates slowly, perhaps once
every 250 earth days, and goes in
a backward direction
"I tried every way I could to
(it the data into a forward ro
tation." lie said, "but it is con
sislc.it only with retrograde mo-
lion."
Teen-age Pnciie Hogi
Humiliated By Mom
By ANN LANDERS
Dear Ann Larders: My mother
just slammed down the telephone.
It was for me. She told a boy,
"I'm sorry.
Gwcn has talked
on the phone
enough for one
evening. Call
back tomorrow."
Ann, I m so
furious I'm
afraid to speak
to my mother
because I don t know wiiat I
might say. So, I'm writing to you
instead.
All teen-agers like to gab on
the phone. Sometimes we overdo
it. but we try to be sensmie.
Once in awhile, when I've been
on too long, my mother Will pass
by the phone and Jive me a
dirty look. I always it right off.
But this last insult was so Humil
iating I don't think I'll ever be
able to face that boy again.
Please put my letter in the
paper so mothers of teen-agers
can see how we feel. Is there
a solution to this telephone prob
lem? TOMATO RED
Dear Tomato: I understand hf)w
a mother can be pushed to the
brink, but. It would have been
better had she handed you the
phone with Instructions to be off
in three minutes.
When a phone must be shared
by a family there should be a lim
ited number of calls per teen and
a limit on the yakking time. This
should be discussed and agreed
upon family style.
Dear Ann Landers: I'm a career
girl of 30. who shares an apart
ment with a widowed aunt. Aunt
Hilda is 59 and looks older.
Six months ago we met a man
36. He was friendly to both of
us and we invited him over for
meals. After awhile he began to
ask Aunt Hilda out. They went to
the movies together and to visit
friends.
Now they don't go out much to
speak of. They just sit around
here and I am sick of it. Our
grocery bill has doubled because
of him. Aunt Hilda orders choice I
steaks, fresh mushrooms, fruit
out of season, and artichokes. Ev
cry night it's a banquet. We share j
all expenses, so I am paying lor
half of these luxuries. We arc
behind in our bills for the first;
time in the 12 years we've been
living together.
The age ailfcrence between
these two is scandalous and sev
eral people have mentioned it, but
Aunt Hilda says they are jealous.
Please tell me what to do.
DISGUSTED
Dear Disgusted: Sooner or later
you and Aunt Hilda will come to
a parting of the ways over this
man. I suggest sooner.
Kind a new roommate your
own age. fiur present living ar
rangements sound dradly (or a
woman of J. The free loader
could be a blessing In disguise.
Dear Ann Landers: My husband
seems to have gone wild over
hunting dogs. Wo now have three.
PAGE S-A
HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls, Ore.
Sundav, December 30, 1967
Jury Convicts Four Of Fraud
Twice a week he is out at night I
running with the dogs to "keep
them in shape."
We have two small children
and he pays more attention to the
dogs than he does to the chil
dren. I won't go into the expenses
involved but 1 could have a
mink coat for what my husband
has spent feeding the dogs, hav
ing them licensed, inoculated,
trimm?d and housed in the ken
nels when we are out of the city.
I have discussed this problem
with several Iriends and relatives
and they are all on my side.
What do you say? DOG
GONNED Dear Dog-Gonncd: You are for
tunate not to have more serious
matters to complain, about. If
you had to take care of the
hounds or clean up after them
I'd say you would have a valid
beef.
There's something terribly un
appetizing about wives who tat
tle on their husbands. You may
win the poll, kiddo. but you stand
to lose a great deal more. Cheer
up and look to the day when he
takes the children hunting.
Are you tempted to smoke be
cause the crowd docs? If so.
send for Ann Landers' booklet,
"Teen-age Smoking." enclosing
with your request 10 cents ir. 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 envciope.
TACOMA, Wash. iL'PI'-A fed
eral court jury Friday night con
victed four of five Washington and
Oregon men in an interstate fraud
trial involving lumber and land
transactions in the Pacific Northwest.
A fifth defendant, Joseph Dclav,
a Spokane attorney, was acquit
ted of two counts of conspiracy
hy Presiding Judge William East.
Delay's case was tried with the
other four but the Spokane attor
ney elected to have the judge
rather than the jury decide his
late.
The jury of ten men and two
women convicted Anthony Fernan
dez of Longview, Wash., on eight
of nine counts of conspiracy to
commit interstate fraud.
Carl Pratt, Portland, Ore., was
convicted on three counts of con-
piracy and fraud.
Raymond Dual. Kelso, Wash.,
was convicted on five counts, and
Burl Dalgliesh, Haines, Ore., was
convicted on two of three counts.
The jury returned its verdicts
at 8:38 p.m. after having received
the case at 11:45 a.m. Friday
Following the reading of the jury
verdicts, court was recessed brief
ly, then Judge East delivered De
lay's verdict.
DENTAL PLATES
Repaired, etc.
Our convenient, handy,
practical, ond economical
lervicei NOW available.
No appointment needed.
No tteUv - no willing
fcakjr Credit
fcvtnliiri by request
OPEN 9:00 - 5:00
1033 Main St. TU 4-3284
v
Will Be Closed
NEW YEAR'S DAY
OPEN JAN. 2nd
Under New Management
Bring the Family
and Your Friends
Enjoy the Excellent
Cuisine of Old China
or Fine American Dishes
CHINESE FOODS TO TAKE OUT
421 Mqin TU 4-6578
U LJ.T.TS'g.B-?! ill
NOW!
Continuoui Iron 12:43
Explcdes with Excitement!
Y Jules VernesW
Woman Killed
In Auto Crash
Itv I nitrd Pro ! tiler natkmel
A Portland woman became Ore
con's ful tiil.ihty of ll.n lone hol
iday wwkond Saturdov when the
was fatally nmncd in a head-on
irash south of Pay'.on
Acda Joan Johnson, died in
Ihe crash. Polue said her car
swerved into tho path of an on
coming car. Two ounc women in
the olMei tar, Judy M Powell v
Yamhill and Viola Uodncy ol
jcarlto.i, wire wiously injured
j Thrv were hospital ed at Mo-
Miiim il!o
! Tne holiday weekend he;an Kri
jdnv a' p m. and runs through
im.dnicht Tursdav
Funerals
WOLFRAM
Funeral itrvlcti for Bttfy Mr Wolf
ram will b r'd wondAv. Dc. 31, t
10 30 a v in O'MOf 't Vt mortal C0tl.
Interment Ki-iam Memorial Park.
Obituaries
HOf
S'ir'fy fffder Hotf Jr , 11. disj here
0. Jl. Survivor P'nti. Mr
-t Mr. Stanley R Ho". B'O'ners. Bruce
Riiikt HoH. titter. Marth Kay ar-d
Cheryl Dann Hot, Of K I a m A t n
Mill; flranflWer. Julian Roqif. Bin
ton. Matt G'evevrte ttrvktt Kiamatu
Memorial Park Monday. Oc. 3). at 10
am Wafflt Kiamam Funeral Home In
charge
Lapland is not a separate coun
try. The repion belongs to r in
land, Sweden and the Soviet Vn-ion.
Jules Verne's
473 IH SEARCH OF THE
Castaways .
LV ttCMMCOlCR
tflamettt FetTi. Oreo
Ppfttiihe ativ ((! tat I atf uMav
Servirt Sfivthern OrtA
and Nartfiern Ctltroifli
by
Imi h V3' U tat
Kiamatn PubiiNin Cemainy
Mem at tioana
pftne TUtedo IMI
W. ft. SweeHend. PvMttr
4 a K"fl Out m atter at
oil eHtce at unmet Pa"t. O'eta.
en Auitt It. HH under ad e Can
ret. Mertn I. $een-clatt
aee ed at K iain F an. Ofeean,
nd at ef''et "M..f at'ifM
SURSCRIPTION RATH
Can
Men
VivtM
1 Veer
Mail tn Advance
I Metft
Mentnt
1 Year
Carrier and PWt'l
weeftdey Sv4t- lr
HN'TfD PRESS INTItNATtONAt.
AUDIT RURVAU OP CtRCULATtON
luKriri mm reeivlt delivtry
rneir Her id and Hm, veat
I 1 1
UI.H
I I n
I'lN
HI H
Checkers and
Changing Locations
both call for wis
dom before moving
When i' your move
CALL TU 4-7425
PEOPLES
WAREHOUSE
SmeR 1911
Only lecdlly 0Rtat Mdvtn
lnal or w rtntanr n o in
f frtrri,-rd mo i ere v.
modern equipment.
IRLI 1'TIMMH
Fierat ( ratm rek-
mc St'tia tr Pfctn .
(ri Caentrv er Arnd Ike
V it
1 V"a
24-oz.
B0SC0
8-oi. Instant
Fla-Vor-Aid
$119
pkg. C
'lj cup (imoll con
undiluied MORNING
EVAPORATED MUK
I egg
I V poundt ground beef
Vi cup fine Crocker C'urrtbl
i
i
i
i
i
1 Vj leotpoont toil
Va teoipoon pepper
1 teoipoon dry multOfd
cup finely chopped onion
Vi cup finely chopped
green pepper
Blend tilt Ingredientx !0Kth?r until wfll mixed. Form meat
mixture into 12 thin putties (about S cup ruchl. Place eaih
pattv on half hamburjier bun. covering romrleiely. Tlsce
Bunburpers on broiler pan Broil 5 7 inches (rom heat for
5 to 7 minute or in laMel Top mch Punburcer with
cheese alice. broil until cheese bubble (I to 2 minutes). Serve.
j anacin 1 mm
!; Reg. 1.98 $i in
!; 200 TABS lal gjnF
C Rpnufiful bcenratpA M A 00 S
TUMBLERS 12 01 0s l ;!
i Heavy Base
Make "Bunburgers" With
MORNING MILK
Ground Beef 3 r. 1 w
Add zest to your Burgers with
fuNA-4-CATS 329e
Liquid Liquid Elastic Waldorf Toiler Scott's
FELS STARCH TISSUE Confidets
53c Qt. 29c 4r0s39c 12, 43c
Use First National Bank Money Orders, Up to 300.00 20c
Remember, all prices
in last Thursday's ad
good through Monday
while stocks last. We
are closed today (Sun
day as always) and
New Year's dcy so that
our employes may en
joy these special days
with their families!
We wish to say "thanks" to our many friends
and customers for their patronage this past
year, and again pledge to do everything in
our power to bring the people of the Klamath
Basin the best possible foods at the lowest
possible prices. It has been over a year since
we discontinued trading stamps. Your patron
age this last year has shown us that you have
appreciated lower prices without stamps. This
and many other in-store changes have en
abled us to consistently give you cash sav
ings on everything you buy at Biq-Y. We will
continue to do our best to offer these sav
ings in 1963.
TRY THIS FABULOUS NEW RECIPE!
Here's a new kind of
cheeseburger-hamburger
patty, cheese slice and half
a bun all broiled together.
No wasted juices, no messy
broiler or frying pan!
p N
I tHeope mjfcej 6 ierinH s
"BUNBURGER" RECIPE
Right Reserved To Limit Closed Sundays 4710 So. 6th
lUtadd aini rrd 1 P m.