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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 26, 1963)
Animals ACROSS 41 Unit of 1 A tiger ii t big reluctance one 42 Cognizant 4 Female horse 45 Stopped 8 Young theep 49 Affirms 12 Malt brew officially jSPoemi SI Ace 14 Tropical plant 52 Awry 15 Males S3 Remove 16 Rusticity IB Makes sorrowful 20 Pausre 21 Auricle 54 Feminine nickname 55 Dregi 56 Fruit drinki 57 Observe 2'J I'nclosei (poet.) DOWN 1 Eccentric wheels 2 Alhena 3 Most kindly 4 Spiritless one 5 Arabian gulf fi Maine 7 Worm IMiSca Dim lift Rope bow 27 Cushion SO F ancy 32 Threaten 34 Miami Beach is one rhvsostiginine 36 Suffix 37 Deeds 39 Walk in water 8 Narrow ways 9 Altitudes tab) 10 Ms'nihw 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 3 19 110 111 12 13 H 15 16 17 18 19 j20 -hr--jn- r 24 25 lY ! 127 28 29 30 31 P" 32 33 34 j 35 36 rT37 38 In 39 pO 1 141 , " " 44 J45 46 47 48" '?9 50 5T 52 ""53 54 55 56" 57 I 26 Birthday Gift May Multiply By ANN LANDERS Dear Ann Landers: Am I wrong In be angry? My birthday was last Friday. I had given my boy friend lots of hints starting t vv 0 We've done plenty of win dow shopping together so he knows what my taste is in jewelry, fur jack ets and luggage. He has a good job and is not short of money. The morning of my birthday T received a telegram saying: "Sorry your birthday gift has not arrived. It has been ordered and is on the way. Please be patient. Love. Hubert." We had dinner together that evening and 1 thanked him for the me.-sa.ge. He assured me 1 would love the present. Well, tins morning lie phoned all ex cited. The "gift" had arrived and he would bring it right over. I almost went through the floor when he showed up at the front door with two baby ham pers in a cage. I have no interest in ham sters. To me they look like al lev rats. What shall I do'.' ROBBED Dear Rohbed: (live The Last of lite Big Spenders his two hamsters back before you have eight. Dear Ann Landers: I'm sure 1 am not the only mother in this world who tried to hide her hurt feelings and pretends to all the world that her son or daughter is loving and consider ate w hen such is not the case. Is it too much to expect a piosicrous married son to pick up the telephone and call his mother every two weeks? The night rate is 45 cents for a station call. Am I selfish to want some small remembrance on Mother's Day and perhaps a telegram on my birthday? The last time I spoke with my son 1 called him. I told him it would be nice if he could alter nate the cajls. I would call him once a week and he could call me the next week. He said. "Fine." That was seven weeks ao. I haven't heard from htm since. Why arc children so in considerate? Shall I call him or what? Please advise. VERY SAD km Notice To p.l-irno O' isomers Miller's Books are closed for the month! All charge purchases made balance of this month will not be due until Jan. 10th. Christmas shop now and pay next year! Sf) y.2 Main Free Poring of 5th & Klamath Answer to PrevTout Punle kanM nickname 31 Oclllintd 1 1 Tunisian mler 33 Slur post 17 Mountain 38 Tried crests 40 Ram 19 Philippine 4! Dtmolishei municipality M Grandparental 23 ApplehU 43 Salary (rum 44 Nautical term 24 ttearv 46 Far olf (coml). 25 Paradise forml Nautical vessel 47 Indian 27 Geometric lines 48 Trouph 28 Bitine soruv in 5 Low sand HI! Okiahnmt Dear Very Sad: Children who discard their parents like paper plates after a family picnic don't get that way by accident. There is always a reason for selfishness and indifference. My advice is to leave the boy alone. He may remember to pkk up the phone and call his mother when his own son gives him the deep-freeze treatment. Dear Ann Landers: 1 am a pediatrician who has been driv en to the brink by mothers w ho have an appointment for one child and bring all four young sters to the office simply be cause she has made no arrange ment for someone to stay w ith them. This practice: 1. Creates a problem of over crowding in the reception room. 2. Exposes healthy children to possible disease. 3. Diverts the attention of the nurse and receptionist. 4. Encourages (lie physician to get the family out as quickly as possible, thereby reducing his effectiveness. Thanks for any help you can give , us beleaguered pediatri cians by passing the word. W.R.T. Dear Doe: The word Is passed hut don't hot your little black bag that it will change anything. Mothers will continue to drag all (he kids along because it's cheaper than hiring a sittrr. Ann Landers' frank and infor mative new book. "Teen-Agcrs and Sex" $2.!)3 Is now avail able at your book store. 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 envel ope. FRIENDLY HELPFULNESS To Every Creed ond Purse WARD'S Klamath Funeral Home Marguerite Ward and Sons 925 Hih Ph. TU 2-4404 3 I i imi i- w fi lA'R'ElAI -S!JiEgs.E1 hl i IaIt-I ' 'S'MI M A'Vl eUan SF Suburbs To Be Home Of Bng Crosby Family HILLSBOROUGH. Calif. (CPU A 24-room Tudor-style man sion, shaded by fine old oak trees and overgrown with ivy, is to be tlie next home of the Bing Crosby family. Leaving Southern California and their West Los Angeles mansion behind, the singer is expected to move his wife, Kathy. and their three young children to this exclusive San Francisco suburb sometime af ter tlie first of the year. The cost of tlie house is $175. 000. Tlie reason for the move, Crosby says, is that they have a lot of friends around here. Another reason, according to some, is that the Crosbys want to raise their children well away from the Hollywood hustle and bustle. All's (Itiift If it's quiet and seclusion that they want, they should find it in Hillsborough. The community is one of the wealthiest suburbs of San Francisco. It rests in patrician isolation among the steep wooded hills of tlie San Francisco Peninsula skyline 18 miles south of the citv. fv 11 as then, time for a From our forefathers comes the tradition of Thanksgiving as a time to stop end con sider our blessings and reverently to render thanks to the Almighty for all the good things in life . . . after having striven mightily for another year to achieve those ma terial necessities and comforts. Then as now the world was full of trying problems, they met every difficulty with hope, faith and courage. We the people of Down town Klamath Falls are thankful for the opportunity of playing our part in provid ing the necessities and comforts of our time in this bountiful Klamath Basin. YOUR Anita Shopi Beach's Jtwalcrt ficll'l Hordwort Bogotsy'i Shoat Tht Broiler Buitmon't Scad Store Columbian Optical Co. Chuck Wagon Tlie house Crosby has ar ranged to buy is at 101 Robin Road in Hillsborough's Crolaiids section. It is situated on six acres of land reached by driv ing down a road lined with white picket fences. Tlie house itself is almost hidden from tlie road by tall trees and shrubs. It has three stories and an ivy -covered white brick exterior, with a sloping slate roof and old-fashioned leaded w indow s. The garage, which can house six cars, has a patio of its own, a sitting room and two bed rooms. Beamed Ceilings There is a large (oyer inside the entrance to the house, with Spanish-style wrought iron light ing fixtures. To the right of tlie foyer is an oak-paneled library and an enormous drawing room with beamed ceilings and fire places. A curved wooden staircase leads to the upper floor and the bedrooms. Crosby bought the place from tlie estate of the late Mrs. Phoebe Carter Alexander, wid ow of Douglas C. Alexander, a i stockbroker. -'"7 ' C2 " 1 -, - :i n ;. -,' DoVJMf r"1 All Currin'i for Drugs Derby't Muiic Co. Drewi Manttort Fart baa Studio first Federal Sevingi & Loon Gena'i Mens Wear The Gun Store Hotter furniture , - President Never Used 'Hot Line' MOSCOW .1 Pl - Inited Press International learned on the best authority today that President Kennedy never used tlie "hot line" to Premier Nikita Khrushchev. There had been speculation H might have been used between Moscow and Washington during tlie worst moments of tlie Auto bahn crisis in Germany in Octo ber and early November. Nor was the emergency com munication circuit between the White House and tlie Kremlin activated when tire Russians ar rested Prof. Frederick C. Barg hoorn on espionage charges. Barghoorn was released after American protests through nor mal channels and President Kennedy's strong demand at a press conference for the pro fessor's freedom. The "hot line" is designed for brink-of-war situations to cut through everything and get to the top on both sides to avoid any misunderstandings that could bring on a nuclear holocaust. . r-. " r ) Harmon's Mans Store Hapco Jones' Office flkariV Klamath fe ttMr Center Leo's f oJfnfA Jjjj) JnWl 1 1 fern im uMW TwHi HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath World Leaders Study By PHIL NF.WSOM I'PI Foreign News Analyst Memo to various world lead ers: You will want to know alxntt the new President of tlie United States, what kind of man lie is and the foreign policy (lie I'm' ed States will follow under his leadership. Many of you already have met this tall Texan who as vice president travelled about :.ie world on missions in behalf of President Kennedy. First: Nikita Khrushchev: There were reports from high Commu nist diplomats in London over the weekend that you were deep ly disturbed tliat a change now may be made in U. S. strategy. You first met Johnson in Washington a couple of years ago and it's probable you didn't make a good impression. Your greeting to Johnson was recall ed tliusly: "I do not know you, but I have read all your speeches and I do not like any of them." Berlin Speech In that case, you surely recall MERCHANTS Poy Le 6rug Stare PwlUMDt Cote dm. yoaaamn Cr o W,Selr)i Whrtol't -) Your Stort Falls. Oregon Tursday, November 26, 1963 I a speech Johnson made before the West Kerlm Parliament ui August, l'Jfil, just after erection of tlie Berlin Wall. He said: "To the survival and to the creative future of this city, we Americans have pledged, in ef fect, what your ancestors pledged in forming tlie United Stales: 'Our lives, our fortunes and our sacred honor." " That means there will be no lack of I'. S. determination to continue to defend allied rights in West Berlin. Mao Tsc-tung of Rod China: You recall a visit Johnson made to Formosa und to South east Asia. In Formosa, Johnson told Chiang Kai-shek that the United States "has no intention of recognizing the Peking regime" and opposes "sea'ing the Peking regime in the United Nations." And you also must remember wluit Johnson said in tlie Philip pines. He said there that "we will continue to honor oiu' ob ligations and w ill proceed either alone or with our free world friends to preserve our position in Asia." 0 New U.S. After Johnson got home from that trip he recommended that an additional $100 million be set aside for economic and mili tary aid to go primarily to South Viet Nam, Thailand and Pakis tan. Not much comfort for the Red Chinese there. President Charles de Gaulle: President Kennedy opposed your determination to build an in dependent French nuclear force. He did not like your veto of British membership in tlie Eu ropean Common Market. You remember that in Paris Jolinson also called for "a true Atlantic community with common insti tutions." He told you that in stead of French nuclear forces. CAR WASH Monday thru OC Thursday I 3 Fri. and Sot. 1.50 Open 9 till 5 Sparkle Car Wash 4023 So. Sixth V iV V , -i .it Mm v vVv f- -, ':' ' ,f. . -'vSM 4.-.,.-.vJ..( )'. M A i d .fer St? PAGE-7 President NATO needed to reinforce its non-nuclear defense. Joint memo to Prime Minster! Nehru of India and President Mohammad Ayub Khan of Pak istan: You must remember the man's humanities. With Nehru he dismissed hunger, illiteracy and disease and how they could be eliminated. OPEN THANKSGIVING DAY Weather Permitting SERYING YOUR FAVORITE THANKS GIVING DINNER "If a blixiard. sloy hornet" Cattle Crossing Cafe FORT KLAMATH mm a mm mmm m1 m 'S ' V A -3 1 k B