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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 28, 1951)
PAGE TWO HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON FRIDAY, DKCKMHKIt 211, lii.n . , . ' . . . a , , a I 1 ' i KFLW 1451 Kc. PST Friday Evening, Dec, SI DO Sport! HlfhlUriU :15 Horn Town Ntwl IS World Nflws Summary 30 Suburban Soranadt ras Headline Edition ABC S Newa riiih.i, ABC f oo cnitita riahu ABC 00 Richard Diamond ABC 30 ThU II Vour rBI ABC . 00 Onlt and Uarrlat ABC :N Conrtrt of Favorilai 10:00 10 P.M. Headllnaa ,0:13 Claramont Oreo, ABC 10:30 lnaomnla Club UtfO Nawa Summary ' ll.-OI Sin Off . KFLW 1450 Kc. PST Saturday, lie. 19 00 Sign-On Newt Summary 6 AS Corn In tha Morn 0:43 Farm rara 110 Nawa Brkfit EdIUon 7:13 Charlta's Roundun 1:30 Bob Carre. Nawa ABC 1:40 Top Of tba Mornlnf 1:99 Mu.lt I: COMPLETE . I I RADIATOR 1 SERVICE CLEANING FLUSHING REPAIRING BALSIGER MOTOR CO. Main ot Esplanade Ph. 3121 00 No Schbol Today ABC 8 00 Saturday Serenade 9 30 Spr Patrol ABC 10:00 Lady Skyhook 10:15 Il'i DanrtUme 10 30 Shaka tha Mararac ABC 11:00 Metropolitan Opera ABC 2:15 Basin Brief 2 30 ratcinating Rhythm. ABC 3O0 Junior Junction ABC 3 9U American Farmer ABC 4 00 Faith lor Future ABC 4:15 Krrat.di of Mercy 4:3 Rtxiucit fully Your 3:30 Red Nichola Show ABC 5:45 lt'i Movie Time 6 OO S porta Htghliahtt 615 Home Town iw 6 23 World Newa Summary 30 Selene Editor ABC 6 45 Words of Ufa 7 oo Mr. District Attorney ABC T 35 MuMc t:M Bedtime Stories 8:00 Lone Ranger ABC 8:30 U S S R. ABC B 00 Sugar Bow) Basketball. ABC 10 0U 10 P.M. Headline 10:15 Sugar Bowl Basketball. ABC 10:30 Insomnia Club 110 New Summary U:05 Sifn Off KFJI 1150 Kc PST Friday Evening, Dec. If 60 Gabriel Keatter MBS 6:15 Quia Show ' 6:X Around Town New. 6:45 Sam Hayes New ABC 6:55 Bill Herry MBS 70 The Hidden Truth MBS 7:30 Cisco Kid MBS 8:00 John Steele. MBS 8:30 True Of False MBS 90 Glenn Hardy Mews MBS 9:15 Fulton Lewis Jr. MBS 9:30 Crime Fighter MBS 0:35 5-Minute Final MRS t0:oo I Love m Mystery MBS H:13 l ha 10:45 Stars on Parade 110 Nite Owl News 115 Night Owl Club ia:w sign uit KFJI 1150 Kc PST Saturday, Dec, 29 6:00 Musical Reveille 6:45 Farm Reporter 6:55 Local Newa 70 Hemingway New MBS 7:15 Breakfast Gang MBS 7:30 Newa 7:45 Beat Buys y 8:00 Morning Melodies 8:15 Breakfast Gang MBS 8 30 Haven of Rest MBS. 90 EmlTa Saturday Specials 9:15 Dance Tune 9:30 OPS Program 9:35 Currin's Program 9:40 Social Security Program 9:45 Favorites of Yesterday 10:00 Newa MBS 10:15 Name Bands 10:30 Ricky's R 11:30 Blue-Gray 2 00 Bast-Wevt Game. MBS 4 30 Frank Hemingway, New. MBS, 4 45 Music 500 Air force Hour MBS 5 30 Christian Science 3 45 Proudly We Hatl 15 Quia Show 6 30 Around Town Newa 6 45 Marine Show 6 55 Local Newa 7.00 Hawaii Calls MBS 7:30 Klamath Temple B oo Dude Ranch Roundup MBS 30 Guy Lombardo MBS 9:00 New MBS 913 Dance Orch, MBS 9.55 Cecil Brown. News. MBS 1000 Monica Whalcn. MBS 1013 Dance Orch.. MBS 10:30 Arthur Van Orch., MBS 110 Nne Owls News. 11 OS Night Owla Club 12:00 Sign Off More Food Is Prospect 'Dead' Woman Files Suit BAN FRANCISCO If A 60 yar old widow Li serving damages iiuui in. nospitai wnere su8 re vived after having been pro nounced dead. Mrs. Theresa K. Butler tiled a 1533.70 claim anam.Nl the city Thursday. She said ataft members at Harbor Emergency hospital "used excessive heut without nron- er temperature control . , , and burned my bark, rlRlU arm and leu and abdomen to bring me back to consciousness.'' She (aid the 1533.70 represented doctor bills for treatments. Mrs. Butler was found ' uncon scious In her apartment Nov. 8. pronounced dead by a doctor of an overdose of sleeping pills, and sent In a morgue. An attendant noticed a faint pulse and sent her to a hospital. Eventually she re gained Iter faculties and departed to complete writing a book. Stassen Files For President On GOP Ticket; Pledges Defeat Of Reds But No Var, High Moral Standard In U.S. Bakery. Tavern, Cafe Up In Smoke ABERDEEN. Wash.. LH A PiEW YORK, lt More food will. general alarm lire destroyed Opening New Year's Day! JEAN and KATE'S CAFE ' Formerly Pines 19 Milet North on Hiway 97 6 Miles So. of Chiloquin FREE COFFEE & DONUTS OPENING DAY COME OUT FOR A TURKEY DINNER NEW YEAR'S DAY be available to Americans In the coming year, but demand also is expected to rise because of higher individual incomes, Paul S. Willis, president of the Grocery Manufac turers of America Inc. declared in a year end statement today. "We look back over the months of 1951. we must conclude that tt has been a good year on the whole in tne food ana grocery industry trom the standpoint of the farmer, tne manutacturer and the consunv er." Willis said. "Crops have been abundant, vol. ume has been substantial. In snlte of the Korean conflict and the con tinuation o near record food con sumption in the country, no general food shortage appeared." Uncertainties lie ahead, however. he continued, and the prospect of war or peace, tne eflect of. Infla tion, tne trend or taxes and the na ture and extent of price controls will ha,ve a "very definite bearing on the food industry" in the com- uig year. He estimated the nation's fnnri bill for 19S1 at around 856 billion, compared - with S52a billion the year before. ft 3L v n ONLY PT7i: I '71:1.1 ntrodu(iunoi tT3lTTJniT,ir.i47JJil '4MbslkekIx wii-jMi2U: EASY Btadbani and bana candaetlan davlcaa aTailabl. at aiadcrala $75 PAYMENTS 715 Main Street before you buy another piece of furniture! OUR ANNUAL JANUARY CLEARANCE STARTS WEDNESDAY, JAN. 2 : "Four Floors of Fint Furniture and Floor Coverings" Klamath, nrutune Co. 221 Main Phone 5353 or 5339 Victim Of Amnesia OK I SACRAMENTO W An amnesia ; victim, admitted to the county hos I pltal here Christmas Eve. was I identified by two former school mates Thursday after a newspa i per ran his picture. rticnara uau. 26. saw the picture and story in the Sacramento Bee and recognized it as Fred Mark ham. 27, an old high school friend from Irrigon. Ore. They had not seen each othef for eight years. Gau said his sister. Doreen called at the hospital and Mark ham recognized her atvi partially regained his memory. The hospital called Markham's sister, wno lives in Kennewtck. Wash. She said Markham was an 8lrman with the Fourth Troop Car rier Command at McChord Field, Wash. The airman will be trans ferred to Mather Field Hospital. Building Industry Hits New Peak NEW YORK. WV Despite uncer tainties and confusion, the construc tion industry during 1951 hit an al time peak In dollar volume, Har old R. Berlin, Vice President of Johns-Manvllle Corp., declared In a year-end statement today. New construction and other build ing activity ran to a record 37 bil lion dollars In 1951, he said, but physical volume of building de clined about 5 percent from the previous year. "It appears nepv, because of the metal shortages, that there will be an over-all decrease in the amount epenr, ior ail types of construction in 1952." the Johns-Manvllle offi cial saia. bakery, a tavern and a cafe in downtown Aberdeen late Thursday night. The loss was estimated unoffi cially In excess of 1100.000. Equipment from Aberdeen. Ho quiam and Cosmopolls responded to the general alarm sounded al 10:05 p.m. when flames broke out In a building housing the Olympic Bakery. Cosy Inn tavern and Colo- nua t-aie. The loss Included eight bakery trucks . fully loaded for morning deliveries and new equipment bakery officials said cost more than S75.0O0. Firemen said the fire apparently was started by a boiler explosion. u LIU UIUL MILITARY i ACADEMY Oldest and most distinguished mili tary school in the Northwest, board ing boys from first grade through high school. Special emphasis on the fundamentals of education with remedial assistance. ..the finest mill tirr, athletic, and social training. Enrtllmtnts tcupttd mnjl'mt. IIS ' HIU MIUTUT ACfslMY I I Rocky Butte, Portlind 20. Orefon I I Ptn lend cornplctc liuriuire ad Mlttia. J ity -Zone State. ..-n f eat to all our good friends sincere thanks for your loyalty and your patronage For Your Added Dining Pleasure We Will Be . . . jfifcfJ Ben B. Lee, Mgr. OPEN TILL 4 A.M. NEW YEAR'S EYE Check Shows Nepotism WASHINGTON W In 70 House members' offices, a study of pay roll records showed Friday there Is at least one employe having the same last nam as the congress man. House records do not identify the relationship of employes to the congressman In whose office they- work. But in most of these cases, the employes are known to be relatives of the employing con gressman. Whether nenotism. or the prac tice of favoring one's relatives In dispensing Jobs, is as wiaespreaa in the ssnate is almost unpossioie to determine. Senate payroll records are la beled confidential. But payroll rec ords of each of the 435 House mem bers are available for perusal by newsmen. They list employes by name. Names of congressmen who had on their office payrolls ior Novem ber, persons whose surnames were Ihrsint as the congressman's In cluded the amounts listed are the gross salary, before deductions, for November: Walt Horan R.-Wash. -Helen L. Horan, S128.06. Thor Tollefson R.-Wash. -E. M. ToUefson. S590.59. Army Wives Now Citizens PORTLAND W1 A special cere mony held by Federal Judge James Alger Fee Thursday made two pretty young wives of Ameri can servicemen U. S. citizens. Mrs. Emily Roslna Heflin and Mrs. Margit Hartman Rice took the oath of allegiance so they could be with their husbands next month. Mrs. Rice, who met her husband, Capt. John D. Rice of the Army, In her native Vienna, came to this country to marry him. She plans to join htm in Japan where he is now stationed. Mrs. Heflin. a native of Italy, married 1st Lieut. 8. G. Heflin In San Francisco. A paratrooper, he recently returned from Korea and will report to a new station In North Carolina in January. By LEE LINDLR PHILADELPHIA tin Harold f Stuasen, former Governor ot Min nesota, la going to make a second attempt to win the Republican nom ination for President of the United Slates. Stassen. nnv nrealrient nf the University of Pennsylvania, 'ilium nay llliiht loined two other am. soned GOP ramuaigneri In the nomination tight U.S. Senator Robert A. Talt of Ohio and Gov. Earl Warren of California. There was lmmprilato Hon that 8tassen'- ' declaration nuum (iow aown iie drive of a number of Reput.lcans who have oeen campaigning- to get Gen Uwlght U. Eisenhower into the new. However, barkers of the Gen' ral discounted such speculation. Banker Sees More Savings NEW YORK. ttV-Savlngs banks can look for a contimieo, upward trend In derxislta in ifttl rrl a Freese. president of the National Association of Mutual Savings Dunas, declares in a year-end state ment. "Mutual savings bank deposits are approaching Uie 131 billion mark for the first time in the 133- year history of these Institutions,' he said. ' "The past year has witnessed a gain of more than 1800 million as coniDared with an lncreaae of le than S750 million in 1950. Dividends I paid to savings bank depositors during 1951 totaling approximately HOO million were at a higher rale than during the preceding year in ovuie aiaies. run employment win add to sav ings in Wij he states. Slassen tald aoma time im he wuuiu euourse tne generals nom ination If Talt would do tho aame. In faot, the Minnesota!! recently askod Taft publicly to quit Ihe race and support, with Standi, the ciaeunowor campaign. But Thurndnv lllirht. hernra ail. dressing millions of Americans on a nation-wide radio and television fimilcti.it. Htnsai'ii riisnvnu,! nn oiler and said "n la all off now." t am m in race without commitment t0 any other person,' lie declined. He did admit, however, In a haa. iir cuiicu newa cunierrnce III Washlngton-where he flew three hours before (unking his atldreas irrv mat ne decided to acek the rrrsioency alter apcuklug with El aennower in Pails earlier tills iiiuiun. AUiicklnK the present ndmlnls- unuui. i lorciKii ina doinOattie nor iClrs BS "fftllurM nri dlis.n.t. 'A' Exchange To Be Asked WASHINOTON I Tlrlm. Ml.. lster Churchill probably will urge a greater exchange ot atnmM in. iui minion oeiween the United States and Britain during his far- reacning conierence with President aruman. Atomic energy is among the dozen topics he nas told the Ameri can government he wants to take up in the course of his visit here, starting late next week. Both Britain and Canada, with which the U. S. had a partnership In atomic bomb development dur ing the war, have long felt tight American restrictions on atomic secrets were hampering develop ments in that field. Any change In these restrictions. however, would require not only approval by the President but ac-l tion by congress. Whether either! of these conditions will be met In the predictable future Is something on which informed officials here will not even speculate. Idaho To Buy Oregon Plates Freighter Smacks Rocks In Canal BALBOA. C. Z. I The French freighter Charles L. D., carrying wheat from Vancouver, B. C, to Britain, hit a rocky bank in the Panama Canal Thursday night and was seriously damaged Three tugs rescued the 6,749-ton ship from the narrow Oillard Cut and towed her to a mooring at Camboa. midway point on the canal, early Friday. SALEM I Idaho truckers who operate In Oregon must have Ore' ton license plates, Secretary of tate Earl T. Newbry said Thurs day. The new regulation Is the result of a new Idaho law which bans reciprocity with other slates. New bry said he had been informed that Washington and California, alto would begin to collect fees from Idaho truckers Jan. 1. He said that numerous confer ences with Idaho motor vehicle au thorities failed to bring about a continuation of the reciprocity ar rangement. Newbry said, however, that Ore gon farm plates may be Issued to Idaho farmers, even though their farms are not' In Oregon. Farm plate fees are lower than those for other truckers. Inch Of Rain Falls Here Northwest Firms Win Contracts SEATTLE Wl Five Pacific Northwest firms have won con tracts valued at 1251,438, the Seat tle Naval Supply Depot announced Friday. They included: KltsaD Dairyman's Association, Bremer- byear. ton, dairy products, S45.000; Lower And last year's total nreclnlta Columbia Co-operative Dairy As- tlon as of Dec. 28 was 8.21 inches, sociatlon Astoria, $41,000; and Pa- as against a normal rainfall mea clflc Building Materials Co. Port- turement at that date of 4.40 More than one Inch of rain fell in Klamath Falls yesterday, ac cording to the Bureau of Reclama tion rain gauges, and that pushed precipitation in rain and snow here this year ahead of the recorded amounts for the aame time last land, sandblasting, S47.70O. Manley Wilson Seriously III PORTLAND Wl Manley Wilson, state senator who underwent a bladder operation last week, was reported seriously ill in a hospital here Friday. , Hospital attendants said only members of his family may visit him. Wilson is editor of th Wnnri. worker, CIO .Woodworkers Union Social Security Office Stays Open - The local Social Secnrltu nfflre Postofflce, will remain ODen the next two Saturdays Dec. 29 and jan a. Mgr. Don Sutcliffe announced Ihe office would be open those dsys to make up for extra holiday be ing taken Christmas and New Year's Eve. The office Is on the third finer ot the federal building. Free Trial . . . New Corona Pur-t able Typewriter , . , Volebt'a Pla nter Office Supply C. 629 Main. inches. As of midnight last night, Bu reau gauges showed a total of 8.33 Inches of rain had fallen in Klam ath Falls since the stream year began Oct. 1. Yesterday's rainfall alone amounted to 1.18 Inches. The 1950-51 stream year ran at a record pace until late last spring when a dry spell stopped It at about the 15.22 Inch mark. A 139 day dry spell began May 13, and was not broken until almost the end of the stream year on Oct, 1. Teen Age Dance To Be Held Here The annual Teen Air Clnh'a Hew Year's Eve Dance has been sched uled for Jened's, Dec. 31, 9 to 1. The parly la sponsored by teen arers. under the direction of the city recreation department. It Is semi-formal. A buffet supper Is scheduled for midnight, and music for dancing will be furnished by Dick Tracy orchestra. College students are wel come, Price is 2 per couple with only couples Invited. Bob Doverl Ig president of the' Teen Age club. 1. A new American foreign pol icy that would defeat Poiiiiuunlsin without war, and give freedom to all peoples of the world. 3. Higher moral atandard In Waahlnglon "with plain honesty In public employes," 3. A modern gold standard, with a "solid dollar,' to prevent Infla tion. 4. "Full employment, excellent farm Income, conservation of na tural resource and a balanced budget." Fired Grog Sleuth Files For Uamogo 8AI.Af, (41 Unit lur ;'9 4op was filed Thursday aaalnat hi HUlo Liquor Cuiiliul Comiuiiuil by Lloyd J. Ilrltn, dlamiaaed Com inlaalou Inapccior. Ill li e said lie was wrnnuhilly fired hint May 14, and dei-l.rrd 111 Ilia Circuit Court roiniiliiliu Uul he look the Job with the under, uncling he would wink until he was to, letlieiiirnl ago. Oltlll'lt ALBANY, Ore. w A com niltlce has been ordered bv the Aluuuy City Council to olfor a raiulltlnUi for tlte M of cltv inaiiiiurr. Itnalileiil ol Albany have voted Iwli-o for the position ol man agrr to be filled, but the Council nun blocked the apiwliitmeiu. Try Hie New Corona I'orlalil. Typewriter al Volfhl'a I'lonerr Of. fir Hupnly Co. ti Main, IW(0av,TtilfM M I . J "A I1 llul ' Altiirklnrf th r,r....,i 1 atTa7.Cf T 1 "eaa I ration a foreign and domestic pol- A" . g fflfL PROGRAM A "TT iclr, as "failures" and "dlsast- WOa! T rV thi .1 f il rous " stassen said lie would offer I lit? Uf I F0R TH" ' ""aw IDI a "humanitarian and liberal pro- I f"B . J I CNTIRI gri:!!r .,0 ,n' Anw'rii'ait people. I rf 'Vl vi PaMILYI C ll This Is his platform: MVK. Vrwa Jl it t 3 i h insis cinidf it i ft r rt f jmrrz j , Tr:SR.J,i otnll. KSXtf -i?W5tfRS!l Hor-ALeHacaaa, IXV 0. " ? -h-"IXX0 t-LUB AT 1 1.45 A.M. I MX ll. ctinoM f K1 AND STACg TREATS I 1 fPDalELHW 70 FUN-FILLED V- ' jssaviA m lira mm- nrw r t rs Tm&& MUSICAL ROMANCE I I LWtZ-V mVI T7h mA too llvln'ttoril t"l , ft." vSa'LHT ' "- i -a4Nt!lairilllll I ?trirAtas.l Urnv . 7fKT. )(!7A.LU!iU2P STARiy SATUadfl