Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 11, 1963)
i "I'd like the filet mignon, but they told me to order a hamburger!" pouts POINTERS Painless Salad DEAR FOLLY My children always left their salad uneaten when I served it with a meal. I started serving each a bow! of salad about 30 minutes be fore dinnertime while they are watching television. It is a real pleasure and surprise to see every bit of this nourishing food eaten and not a single appe tite spoiled. MRS. H. M. DEAR POLLY The Venetian blinds in my living room have white tapes on them. I s a w printed tapes on some in a pic ture in a home decorating mag azine but couid only find plain colored ones to buy. I measured the width and then the lengths of the tapes on all my blinds before shopping. I bought cot ton braid and with a Greek key design in a contrasting color. 1 first pinned it to the front sides of the old (apes to be sure they were lined up correct ly. Then I sewed them to the old tapes. The blinds open and close as v well as before but now they have a smart new appearance. MRS. ,'H.,. DEAR POLLY - I have learned a lot about picnics this past summer. This winter if you are templed to throw away an old card table, don't. Cut down the legs and save it for sit-on-the-ground picnics. It will be fine for serving food at (he beach, too. It keeps the food out of the sand but within easy reach of bathers gathered round il.-C.G. GIRLS Old card tables, with part pf the legs cut off, make good play tables for children, too. POLLY DEAR POLLY-Tell the girls not to throw away old, worn-out wool sweaters but to use them under dust mops. This works wonders in picking up all the dust and lint, especially under beds and so on. MRS. B.F.Y. DEAR POLLY Now many of us are potting plants we want lo bring indoors for the winter. STORMY WEATHER SPECIAL oi DBYEf? i ZZZ - r ONLY ' Li 13888 Model UD-52X FRU (ONUS GIFT fiw Qvmh Miri SHEET AND TOWlt SET if you purehe nd tmtil new FLAMCKSS ELECTRIC DRYER berween October l nd Dectmbet M (com Ihu loeil OlOr Elfieil Uioue Dultr $24.95 Vilw v Subject N ewvjttiem of dv pufc pwted fh thi ditr. Thit it CdhO't Eteetrel Leffu iporswsd offer. Vttit hm today! A 7 M H POLLY CRAMER Newspaper Enterprise Aun. ova an new ciay newer pots overnight m clear water. That way the clay pot will not soak up the wafer meant for the soil and roots. MRS, H.T.C. JR. GIRLS Please sign your full name and address to your hints. Today it was necessary to discard a couple I thought unusually good simply because they were signed only with ini tials. POLLY Share your favorite h o m e making ideas . . . send them to Polly in care of Herald and News. You'li receive a bright, new silver dollar if Polly uses your idea in Polly's Poiniers. Tax Collections; Up In Oregon SALEM (UPIl Collections through October totaled $36 mil lion, a gain of 5 per cent over (he $34.3 collected hi the first four months of the WS2-63 fiscal year, the Stale Tax Commission said Saturday. Personal income taxes amounted lo $32.8 million and corporation taxes $3.2 million, the commission reported. M. F. Chapman, American mining engineer, trapped II chinchillas in Chile, took them to California in 1923, and s(art ed chinchilla farming in the na tion. And Receive This 24,95 Value Gift $24.91 VjJ FREE Brown Outlines Aid Plan For Mexican-Americans LOS AXGELES tlPV Gov. Edmund G. Brawn Saturday night outlined programs being undertaken by the state to im prove the educational, employ ment and housing problems fac ing California's largest single minority the Mexican-Americans. The governor, in a prepared speech, spoke before delegates tn the fourth annual convention of die Mexican-American Poiit- The law setting up the arbi tration board, the first ever in the peacetime history of rail road labor relations, came when a nationwide railroad strike threatened last Aug. 28. U provided for a Xav. 3S dead line or the arbitration decision and baned lockouts or strikes over the other issues at slake or 90 days fotiawing that de cision. Rail Strike Threatened WASHINGTON' H'PI) - The threat of a naiionwide railroad strike next iMarch was raised Saturday by Grand Chief Roy E. Davidson of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers (BLEl, Davidson warned (bat a new transportation crisis may devel op unless railroad unions score a "real victory" in current ne gotiations over (he almost for gotten "secondary issues," that is, (hose not connected with the size of train crews. His statement was printed in Saturday's issue of "Labor," the official publication of 18 major railroad unions. !( came as final briefs were submitled to an ar bitrate) board considering the dispute triggered by railroad management demands for abo liiion of firemen on diesc! trains and reduction in (he cost of manning trains. Congress referred these two issues to an arbitration board, named by President Kennedy, and ordered the unions and (he railroads to bargain on the "secondary issues" involving pay rales, working hours, holi days, expenses and similar mat ters. Biggest Dryer L I mm M THE ONLY DRYER WITH 14-LE5. CAPACITY Dry any foad, any fahrit, m this new Norge 14. it's the ' most complete, the most ver- ' saifle tirytyr ever built. ' 5ou t-an dry full U b. ' ash io&d su one time. You ran pick one o( four ways to dry iumh)e with warm or cool atr, no-tumme with warm tw cool air a way it dry for any Kin m laimc. J mrp are three air inlets to aaaure an even flow of drying air at all times. ' You haveai your finRrrJips automatic wttinss for "fluff". "lingerie," "aha runs." "wash - n - wear' "cottons -linens." You have any kind of drying you want in a wonder ful new M-i(, cap&rity dryer tnat a so dependable it carries a ft ve-year warranty. See it here, today. Extra Big Trade Allowances!! FREE! FREE! Woltr away with o Free $24.95 volue, 16-pc. "Queen Morie" sheet, pillow coses, towel set when you buy a new Norge Dryer? Set is beautifully gift wrap ped ! f IE SONUS GlfT . 1 J...C. Mm. SHUT AHO TOWH. SCT if you pufctas nd intutf new fLAMELESS ELECTRIC DRYER between Gttafeer t end December 14 from Ibu )oc( CtOi (clric( (.tftgut Dtito Subject to coniittorn of dryer Vint J. W. ical Association SIAPA at tlie Billmore Hotel. He noted that California has 1.7 million Mexican-Americans and that as the largest single minority it was faced with "same of the mast serious socio-economic problems." Bran a said technological changes are keeping unemploy ment ahave 6 per cent at the state's work force, or represent ing 330,009 individuals unem ployed. "The burden of unemployment falls with crushing weight on Mexican-Americans and Ne groes whose jobless raie is dou ble that of the rest of the popu lation," Brown said. He said the state was produc ing jobs through investments in water developments, freeways, schools and oiher institutions, but it could not keep pace with (he necessary 200,009 new jobs needed each year. The governor asked the MAPA delegates io "help us in form tlie .Mexican-American community" of the opportunities for civil service employment and the type of training and ed ucation required by the code of fair practices of tlie state's Fair Employment Practice Commis sion. On education. Brown said his administration was working on a state compensatory education program aimed at reducing the rate of high school dropouts, particularly those having lan guage problems. He urged the elimination of de facta segregation in schools, and called for special teacher train ing far depressed areas and a pre-sehooi training program for the culturally handicapped. A third area of concern, he said, was in housing. He said a report by his advisory cemrois sion on housing problems show ed there are 700,000 substandard homes in the state and that 400, 090 persons were forced to pay at least 35 per cent of their in come for rent because of the lack of lose-east housing. People Read SPOT ADS you ore now. . I News Ever EXCLUSIVE SYEAR WARRANTY NO TRADE NEEDED $10 Down - $10 Month 2 Vtlw purchje f petred with thit duller. him tody! O ' W5 KERNS LITTLE PEOPLE'S PUZZLE 'it I F 3 ii IIP : 1 i 1 i . lit 1 '3tOV3 'L 'QISOM 'VWA. "C 'Kit 'Z NS3i -NVt-O-'SiDVr t 'SNSOH '6 'J.3XNOCJ 8 '3SriN '9 'HiOlS 'S HjilA Gone are the days when every homemaker was a weather -watcher on washdays! Gone are the days of back-breaking washday drudgery - dragging heavy wet clothes outside to a clothesline to dry . . . Gone, matter of fact, -is washday! With an electric clothes dryer any day, any weather, any time is washday , , . and it's ali as easy as turning a diaU . With an electric clothes dryer, you ... AALTZT W ROUGHj, WAS M PAY & & B Radio a Electric TO 2-4434 Cascade Home Furnishings TU 4-8365 Eastside Appliance TU 4-8886 Home Appliance Company TU 4-8183 i. W. Kerns TO 4-4197 Uhlig's FREE 1 v if Tt offf s&sd on!y en ivtw 6rym inUUti in th tysmei o nwei cu4(omrt at COPCO Kvition, Pofie Power & Uqht Compny; XlmiW Ft!, tiS vitvf, A!tur Diitricfi of Cen!t( Diviiion, Picifie Powet & Light Cixripioy; Crty of AsWfid, Ooucjtn Etettcie tooptritive, nd iorpntt Vttttf SKifit- 'A3XDOr "t V ;SS3MSNV on and dry your clothes gentier, smoother, and faster as welt! HEBALB ASS SEWS, KS!afS Junta Leader Claims War Against Reds Could Not Have Been Won Under Diem SASGIW SUS'H - Ma. Gen. iVuatig Van Met, clcatraatt of the mifiiary junta !!)ai deposed Prestdnt Kjja Btnii Uicm, saii Friday t!i& war agaisst Csm mutust gucmiias cauH tsot have been vim with Diem in pow er. "li v.e kisj heea winning tte ivar, we would not have made !hc coup," She feuriy six-iooifi' said. "We made the ccep with ISie ! of wisuiittg ti war." His ri'tnarks isv a inicrview at jimta headiptarters in the gcMrai s!aif iHw!s!ig coiiiiast cd sharply with statements maife ixiwe iasS wt's tsssp d'etat by tnjj U.S. military lead ers. Mwiwiing tira. Paui S. Itarkins and Adm. Harry 1. Keii. Tt AiiH'iran teasiMS iiasi Tfe Vt&r S&sJ PHOTOGRAPH hnm Gffrdt UNDERWOOD'S CAMEFA SHOP Ph. TU 4-7043 it WAS M DAY LOT!H!iS Merit's Hontgomery Ward & Co. Sears Roeback 1 Company Shaffer Eiecfric Tower Furniture rlU 2-5512 ! BeouttfuUy gift wrapped in three separate boxes, these coforfui sets, from J. P. Stevens & Company, ore yours os a gift wtth your purchase of an etectric clothes dryer from o Cof Ore ESectrico! League dealer before December 34fb. Use them to add exciting beauty to your own bed room end bath - use them as gifts to friends. See the Queen Marie gift set dispiayed by your favorite Cos Ore Electricat League deoier. Refoii value: $24.95. ...YOURS Fslts, Owgoo Monday, Sfavrntef J!, I96S Hiait:Saied Suath Viri Nam was wisHiiivg its war againsi the Viet Ceng guerriHas and thai victory was in sight. Diem and his Brother, Ngo Dinh Nhtf, sere overthros n and suteequcnfSy kiiirsS dssrsng a ssi itary nrising that took plaos JJov. I a!j 2. T! ai-fios ! minated nearly fotfr months of crisis set off by BsMfsSiisS civarg es o? religious persecution aoi sfoasp govMnnwHS measures i& cnrtail nrftest demoustratiorss. Minh said that under Dient nod Kiiu, roiiiSary rnoraie was low because the Nga famitir Basesi promoSioas aiS Sive t!ai of command on loyalty ta tlie CA.R WASH and WAX $8.00 Monday Jfcru TiiUfstJoy 9 Jiff 5 Sparkle Car Wash 4323 So. 4eh IS A WALTZ mm SR.13 TO 44478 TO 4-3188 TO 2-4481 TO 2-5503 jy 4-8858 & 5,our fovorSe Efecfricctf league dealer- 16pteee Queen Marte SHEET AND TOWEL SET ABSOLUTELY FREE! regisne, ratiKr &an sn efSaea- Minh said tfie- strategic Ram it pfogram tesigtssd ia defeat five Viet Cong in rarai areas was being aseii ia oppress tt vS. iagers rather than pretecl ihem. "in my owa viSage, pep! had ffed to live close to the Viet Cong," iss sasd, Eeporis. irom otSier Vietnamese generais indi cated the ataafton was wide spread, he added. AT SHAW'S I STATIONERY 72 Main MERIT'S 335 East Main TU 4-4478 Ph. TU 4-4197 734 So. 6th