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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (March 6, 1963)
ROTORUA REP TAKES VOODOO FLIGHT Clifford McDonald, Rotorua's official representative to its sister city Klamath Falls, prepares for the supersonic fliqht he took Monday in an F-IOI "Voodoo" jet interceptor, pi loted by Lt. Col Phillip A. Rand, commander of the 322nd Fighter Interceptor Squadron, Such orientation flights are part of the Air Force program to further public un derstanding of its aircraft and their operating capabilities. Toxicity Of Form Spray Brings USDA Warning Pre-spring days and early farm activities bring a reminder from J. D. Patterson. State Department nf Agriculture's chief chemist, In handle agricultural sprays and dusts with kid gloves. Properly used, any crop chem ical on the market is as safe as I he flow ers that brighten the landscape. Patterson oflerS these safety guides for protection of user and innocent bystander, including children: 1. Follow directions on the la beluse the product how and why and when the label advises. 2. Don't flirt with danger by leaving sprays where children may play with them. 3. Don't put spray mixtures in pop bottles or other containers that will tempt children to think they are to be drunk like pink lemonade. 4. When not in use, store original bottles and packages wliere nei ther people nor animals get into them. 5. Preferably, don't take re mainder of these products out of the original container if using: only a portion; if they are put in another container, label it so no mistake as to identity is possi ble. (i. Don't leave them in an open field while the person responsi ble can't keep his eyes on them. If this sounds silly, remember thai a few years ago two young people died from contacting sprays left unattended in an open field. On another angle, Patterson sug gests that persons hiring spray ing done, cither ground or air. should be sure that the applica tor holds a state license to per form this work. It's illegal for anyone to do this type of work for pay unless he has passed the slate examinations and is licensed Overnight operators, out for a "fast buck," are a sure cinch not to have an Oregon license. Power Rate Cut Noted On Mar. 22 tleclnc rate reductions ap proved by Oreaun I'tility Com missioner Jonel Hill lor Pacilic Power and Light Company's serv ice areas in Southern Oregon will be reflected in customer accounts within a week following meter leadings on March 22 and lliere- after. the company reports. "Customers should begin receiv- ing bills based on the lower rates w ithin a week following the March 22 effective d;ue of the PL'C ap proval." according to Frank Bash. Meclfo-.d, vice president and Cop- co Division manager (or PPaiL. In approving the rate revisions that will save electric consum ers $1 million annually, the state utility commissioner noted the rate cut was the largest down ward adjustment ever made in Oregon by an electric utility. The reduction averaging 5.6 per cent represents annual savings of $543,000 to the 59.000 residential customers and $500,000 to 9,700 commercial and industrial cus tomers in Douglas, Josephine. Jackson, Lake and Klamath coun ties. The average household will experience a saving of about $14 annually. PP&L explained it had filed the revised rate schedule in a move toward bringing the South ern Oregon electric rates more in line with power rates in the Wil lamette Valley and other PP&L service territories in Oregon. Bonanza PTA Holds Meet Hedy Weds Sixth Time FRESNO, Calif. (UPI '-Actress Hedy Lamarr, 47. and attorney Lewis W. Boies Jr., 42. honey mooned today at an undisclosed resort following a simple wedding al the Fresno home of a friend Monday night. It was the sixth marriage for the Vienna-born actress and sec ond for Boies, a Beverly Hills. Calif., attorney and former assis tant district attorney here. The wedding took place in the home of Boies' former law part ner. L. Kenneth Say. Superior Judge Joseph L. Joy officiated. Miss Lamarr's first marriage was to munitions magnate Frit. M.yiri, whom she divorced prior to coming to this country in 1!):I7. She married writer-producer Gene Markey in 10.19. divorcing him later in the year. In 1943. she married actor John Lodcr and they divorced four ears later. Her m.wiage to Ted Slauffer. a hotel-rrWuirant man. lasted nine months, and in 1 !.": she married Texas oil millionaire W Howard I,cc. They separated in 1958 and pro onged property settlement battle ensued. She eventually received $500,000 settlement from Lee. BONANZA The Bonanza Par cuts and Patrons Club met in the elementary school gym on Feb. 27 w ith the president, Maxine Brown presiding. It was reported that the new reading machines had been re ceived and at the next meeting Bob Freirich would give a demon stration. Principal Charles Stcb or read letters to the club suggest ing the Wednesday meeting of the club be changed to another night to avoid conflict with church meet ings held on that night. It was voted to pay $2 each for gifts for the eight students run ning for King and Queen of the annual Sweetheart's Ball which will he given in the big gym on March IB. Mr. and Mrs. Roger Reid are general chairmen and Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Yancey, en chairmen. Mrs. Kent gave a progress report on the various committees. Room count was won bv the grades of Olive Fralcy and Larry Lund, and rolreshmcnts were served by Lois Monroe and her committee follow ing the meeting. Double-Date Kisser Pairs With Squares By ANN LANDKKS I loo fussy where men are con Dear Ann Landers: You seem cerned because I have two small to think double-dating is a goodich'klren. u iM,t easy to make a idea for teen-agers. I'd like to point out that af ter what hap pened to me I jun't think I'll ever double date again. Gary and I teamed up with another couple Saturday night Pair Named Contestants FORT ROCK-Judy Irwin and Sandra Dutcher were named Fort Rock School's contestants for the March 5 speaking contest spon sored by the Fort Rock-Silver Lake Soil Conservation District to be held at Christmas Vallev Lodte at 7:30 p.m. Fourteen upper grade pupils competed lor the honor at the lo cal school runoffs on Friday, with Mrs. C. W. Boley, Mrs. Joe Stitz, and Jess Miles as judges. "Woodland Conservation" is the topic to be developed by the six contestants, with Douglas Clark and Joy Ashcraft to represent Summer Lake's Ana River School and Ron Markus and Kelly Corum representing Silver Lake School. Douglas Clark was last year's winner. Each year the winner's name is engraved on a traveling plaque. Teachers working with the pu pils in speech preparations were Mrs. Freda Thayer, Fort Rock; Mrs. Doris Colahan, Summer Lake, and Norman Stialton, Sil ver Lake. Thirty-one boys and girls competed in the three schools. Primary room children and sev eral parents were present Friday lor tbe preliminary contest. Re freshments were served, with Mrs. Thayer and Mrs. Evelyn Rice as hostesses. because Gary's car was in the shop. The couple we doubled with are a pair of squares. We parked just to talk and Gary kissed me a few times. This girl kept turn ing around in the front seat say ing. "Oh pardon mo." Mondav morning Miss Blabber mouth went around school telling everybody Gary and I were neck- up a storm in the back seat and that I was a make-out. I say six or seven kisses is O.K. on a Saturday night date and that making out is more than kissing. Please print this in the paper and explain the difference. Our whole high school is waiting. Miss Q Dear .Miss Q And Her Whole High School: When I was a teen ager bark before the earth's crust cooled, of course necking was the word in vogue and it meant kissing, and ONLY kissing In other words from the neck up. The term "making nut" has popped up during World War Two, from where no one has been able to say. 1 call guess, however, (and it's only a guess) that one sol dier would ask a buddy, when he returned from a weekend pass, "How did you make out?' Among high school and col lege kids, making out can mean anything from holding hands to going the whole route. Beginning in the middle teens most youngsters go in for some kissing and anyone who thinks iitherwise is kidding himself. But a kiss should have significance not any old place with anyone handy just because it's dark. A kiss should lie a very special ex pression of affection and does not nerd an audience. A girl who is called a make out by her friends would do well to take stock of herself. Dear Ann: I'm a divorcee 23 years of age. I can't afford to be Clemency Considered For Terrorists second marriage when you have a ready-mane family I'm going with a nice man who is 33 and has never been mar ried, although he's been engaged a couple of times. He has asked me to meet his folks, and I know lie is serious about marriage. There's only one thing wrong: he doesn't like mv children. He has told me he would never have children ot lus own because the world is in such terrible shape When my youngsters come into the living room he savs, "Please k them to leave. Thev make me nervous. Otherwise ho'd iiMro a ''.lire i.t band. What do mi think.' INEZ Dear Inez: 1 think you'd be out of yrur mind if you married this man. What do vou mean "He doesn't like my children but oth erwise he'd make a fine hus band"? It's like saving "he has cancer, otherwise he's in perfect health." If he can't tolerate your chil dren now what do you think life will be like later? This romance has no possibilities for a happy ending. Dear Ann Landers: My older suter is going with a very nice fellow. She is an unusually tall girl and her boy friend is 6 feet 5. My dad calls him that big ipe." We all like him a lot and this is really an affectionate nick name which Dad uses behind the guy's back. I'm afraid if he ever gets wind of this he will feel awfully hurt. When I mentioned this to my mother she said "There is nothing wrong with the nickname. It's a very natural one." What is your opinion? - SANTA BARBARA SAM Dear Sam: If the nickname were one of pure affection it wouldn't be used only behind his back. I hope your dad finds au nnther nickname soon one he can use to the man's face. r.MHS il'Pl" President Charles de Gaulle today consid ered the possibility of clemency for three terrorists sentenced to death by a" special military court lor trying to kill him. The five-man court condemned the three men Monday night for machine eun attack on De Gaulle's car in the Paris suburb of Petit Clamart last Aug. 22. Only De Gaulle's intervention can save them from the firing squad. There is no apieal from the military court, which was set up last year to combat subversion. The men are ex-Lt. Col. Jean Mali Bastien-Thiry, 35, named as the ringleader; ex-Lt. Alain de Bourgrenet de la Tocnaye, 37, in charge of the ambush; and Jacoues Prevost. 31. a member lot r.!r"!Kr '.' Three defendants still at large w ere sentenced to death in absen tia but they are entitled tn retrial if captured. They are Georges Marcel (The Limpl Watin, 40, also stis)ccted of masterminding an unsuccessful plot to kill De Gaulle Feb. 8: Serge Bernier, 29; and Lajos Marlon, 31. There was no immediate indi cation as lo whether De Gaulle would grant clemency, but twice before he has exercised his pre. rogative in important cases and commuted death sentences to life imprisonment. One was ex-Gen. Edmnnd Jouhaud, deputy com mander of the Secret Army Or ganization I OAS I in Algeria, and the other was Andre Canal, for mer commander of the OAS for France. Eight other men two tried in absentia received prison sen tences ranging from three years to life. Cries of "assassin" and "dis grace echoed through the filled courtroom when the verdicts were. read. Bourgrenet de la Tocnaye's. , wife sobbed and screamed. "Not , a single Frenchman would dare shoot them." HK.RAI.D AND NEWS, Klamath Falls. Ore. Wednesday, March 6. 1963 PAGE 5 A Happy Sez: "Bargain Hunt No Further Just Come In And 4-H Sponsors Window Display MOUNT SHASTA Strawberry Valley 4-H Club is observing 4-11 Week with a window display at Hoffman's, supervised by Valerie llolcomb, and a display at Scott's Realty, supervised by J a n i e Graves. Trophies and ribbons won bv the club members at fairs and articles and equipment used in 4-11 work are on display. A bake sale is planned for Saturday. March 7 at 7:30 p.m. the old armory at Mount Shasta City Park will house the group for its busi ness meeting, followed by a film ind refreshments. Parents are re quested to pick up their children promptly at 9 p.m. Of I icers of the club for 1903 are Raymond Wisncr, president : Janic Graves, vice president; Sandy Ma lin, secretary; Valeric Holcomh, treasurer, and Patty Malin, historian. 8 Ask About Hapco's 2 YEAR WARRANTY Ask about daily "Business Card" SPOT ADS TU 4-8111 OFFICE or BUSINESS SPACE for LEASE In new building to be erect ed at 7th & Walnut. Primt location with parking. Ph. TU 4-6033. 7th & WALNUT (Across front Post Office) Elbert Hubbard, famous author, lost his life when the Lusitania went down. Havo Your Own MEDICARE EqulUlilr'i Major Mrdinl IMan John H. Houston Service Sine l!'Jl up i mm.ii uijuw iii IPenneySs ? ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY t U A. Open riday Nite ill 9 p.m. I Jj WEDNESDAY NIGHT It Specio LADIES' NITE j- w Special Cventi For The Lodiet PONDEROSA ROOM WILLARD HOTEL 205 Main 8 ECONOMY PRICED FOR WORK Ok PLAY! A-OIL TANNED COWHIDE 8" BOOTS Long-wearing non-marking rubber composition oil-resistont soles and j.jj heels! Vulcanized construction. B-MEN'S SNEAKS WITH SUCTION CUP OUTSOLES Air cooled enameling cctton ducks for active men! Smart red striped foxing Sanitized? for extra fresh ness White 4'i-U C-AIR COOLED CANVAS CASUALS Cushioned insoles tor extra com fort. Enameling cotton duck uppers, white rubber foxing with a red stripe' 4V-12 CHARGE IT 2 99 i 99 TO WONDERFUL KNITS And to new spring dress fashions that are so tempting at the new Fashion Villa you'll want to say "Yes!" to a wardrobe of one, two and thrcc-picce styles for every day and for "very special." Cotton Knit Dresses & 2-Pc. 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