Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, January 31, 1952, Page 2, Image 2

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    PAGE TWO
HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
THURSDAY, JANUARY 31, IQM
as
KFLW 1450 Ko PST
Thursday Evening, Jan, 31
00 iporta Highlights
f:lS Horn Town Newa
II 3S World Nawa Nummary
6:30 Suburban serenade
49 llaadllna EdIUon ABC
a:M Coming Atlractloni on ABC
7:00 Mr. President ABC
7:30 Defense Attorney ABC
S:00 Orlg Amateur Hour ABC
8:48 foreign Reporter ABC
y.Mi The uedhead ABC
:3(1 Concert of Europe ABC
10:00 10 PM HeidUnei
10:19 Club Can Do ABC
10:30 Inaomnfa Club'
11:00 Newa Summary
11:09 Sign Oil
KFLW 1450 Kc PST
Friday, Feb. 1
0:00 Sign on News '
a.os Corn In the Morn
C:45 rarm Fare
11:00 New! Ekl.t Edition
7:18 Charlle'i Roundup
7190 Bob Garred 1c Newa ABC
7:40 Top of the Morning
Jr.m Cr-.le S:ns -BC
1:00 Breakfait Club ABC
9:00 Hank Henry Show
0:30 Break the Bank ABC
10:00 Chat Huntley. Newa ABC
10:18 Lone Journey ABC
10:30 My True Story ABC
10:88 Edward Arnold ABC
11:00 Batty Crocker ABC
11:18 Stop St Shop
11:30 Against the Storm ABC
11:48 Mutical Roundup
11:88 Market Report
13:00 New, Noon Edition
12:18 Payaa Sidewalk Show
12:30 Lucky U Ranch ABC
1:00 Paul Harvey ABC
1:18 Better Living
1:3d Mary Margaret McBridc ABC
2:U0 Baaln Briefs
2:18 Accent on Melody
2:30 Joyce Jordan, M.D. ABC
2:43 Rom. Evelyn Winters ABC
3:00 When a Girl Marrlea ABC
3:18 Ted Malone ABC
11:30 Dean Cameron ABC
3:48 Mary Marlin ABC
4:00 Requestluily Vcura
9:00 run Factory ABC
3:25 World FllM Rr"rter ABC
3:30 Chet Huntley ABC
. 8:48 It'a Movie Time
6:00 Sporta Highlighta
0:15 Home Town Newa
6:28 World Newa Summary
6:30 Suburban Serenade
6:48 Headline Edition ABC
6:1,3 S3 'ka Newi Rounriup ABC
7.00 Gillette Flghta ABC
8:00 Richard Diamond ABC
8:30 Thia la Vour FBI ABC
8:00 Chile and Harriet ABC
9:30 Cone of Favorltea
10:rt In P.M. He-1H"-10:19
Dr. Glno'a Musical. ABC
lu:3u insomnia Club
11:00 Newa
11:09 Sign Off
KFJI 1150 Ke. PST
Thursday Evening, Jan. 31
6:00 Gabriel Heatter MBS
8:19 Klam. Theater Quiz.
8:30 Around Town Newa
6:48 Sam Hayes Newa MBS
6:88 BUI Henry MBS
7:00 Harmony Time
7:13 S-sorta Album
7:30 Bobby Benson MBS
l ...
830 Adventure la Your Heritage
8:j lie.ceiocrg harmtmalre
8:00 Glenn Hardy News MBS
8:18 Fulton Lewis Jr. MBS
9:110 Rod Gun Club MBS
6:38 8-Mlnute Final MBS
10:00 I Love A Mystery MBS
10:18 Serenade In Blue
10:30 Bandstand USA MBS
11M Night Owls Edition
11:03 Night Owls Club
12:00 Sign Off
KFJI 1150 Kc PST
Friday, Feb, 1
6:00 Musical Reveille
i;- -s tarre ' .jUlleun Board
:39 Local New.
7:00 Hemingway Newa MBS
7:19 Breakfast Gat MBS
7:30 Newa
7:43 Best '.uye
8:00 Cec': Brown MBS
8:15 Breakfast Gang MBS
:3n Bible Institute MBS
8:00 Homemakera Harmonies
8:13 Halr-Ralslng Tale
8:30 Platter Party
8:45 Favorites of Yesterday
10:00 Newa MBS..
10:13 Tello-Test '
10:30 LaPolrtea
10:48 Concert
10:80 Currins
10:89 Ken Canon
ll.-OO Laoiea tail MBS
11:28 Newa
11:30 Queen for a Day MBS
12:00 Name Bands
12:13 Headline Newa
12:30 Dance Tunea
12:43 Market-Livestock
1:00 Jack Klrkwood MBS
1:30 Tune Teat
1:53 News
2:00 Newa MBS
2:u3 Nelwon. .,ews MBS
2:18 Tea Time Tips
2:43 Answer Man MBS
3:00 Ricky'a Request
4.-00 Speed Gibson MBS
4:13 Hemingway Newa MBS
4:30 Curt Massey Time MBS
4:45 Sam Hay? News MBS
9:00 Twilight Time
8:30 Wild Bill Blckock MBS
3:38 Newa MBS
6:00 Gabi.'el Heatter MBS
8:13 Quia Show
6:30 Around Town Newa
6:43 Sam Hayes News MBS
6:53 Bill Henry MBS
7:00 Adven. of Malsie MBS
7:30 Lleco Kid KiBa
8:00 Bsktbl. KU11S vs. Ashland
8:00 Glenn Hardy. Nawa MBS
9:15 Baktbl. KUHS vs. Ashland
8:43 Fulton Lewis Jr.
9:83 5-Min. Final
PELICAN
Tomorrow
Another Dat
CONTINUOUS DAILY
TONIGHT 0HLY
I JOEL
McCREA
II
loW FREE
" VBaaaaiaaasBaBaaasaaaBaaaaaaaaaaBaaaaaaaaaaaaBaaaaaaaaaaBaaaaaaaaBaaaaaa
lorn I Lve A Mfe-y MUS
10:13 II. S Navy Band
10:30 Proudly We Hall
U:UJ Nigill Owlh Eotlion
11:08 Night Owls Club
12.00 Sign Off
Plywoods To
Get Ceiling
On Feb. 4
PORTLAND (.fl Ceilinfr prices
will be applied to western plywoods
Fell. 4, but there will be no notice
able effect on Uie market.
Carl Donaugh, district Office of
Price Stabilization director, who
announced the ceilings, ' said all
were higher than current market
prices.
The most popular industry prod
uct, quarler-lnch fir plywood for
interior use, currently is selling; at
the mill tor 8.2 cents to 8.3 cents
a square foot. The ceiling level at
the mill will be 9.7 cents.
Besides fir, hemlock, pine, cedar
and redwood plywood will be cov
ered. About 8i) mills west of the
Rocky Mountains are affected.
Donaugh said details were being
sent to the industry and to cham
bers of commerce.
In Washington, the OPS said the
order sets prices for various thick
nesses and the number of plies.
The ceilings per 1.000 square feet,
f.o.b. mills, for sales in carload
lots of some of the major grades,
and dimensions of plywood, and lor
douglas fir veneer tallow:
Douglas fir plywood Sound on
two sides, ranging from $124 to
$266; sound, one side, ranging from
$97 to 3239 depending on the thick
ness and number of plies.
Douglas fir, western pine, west
ern hemlock plywood: Unsanded
interior sheathing. 5-16ths of an
inch, 3 plv, S79; Interior sheathing,
5-8ths inch. 5 ply. S138.
Douglas fir green veneer one
tenth inch, face $30.30, core, $10.10;
l-8th Inch. face. $36. core, $12; one-
sixth inch, core. $16; 3-16ths Inch,
core. $18.30; and l-5th Inch, core,
$19.70.
she regulation applies to soft
wood plvwood manufactured west
of the 105th meridian. The regula
tion does not cover technical ply
wood made according to specifica
tions issued by the Armed Forces,
or to soft-wood plywood with one
or more plies of hardwood veneer.
Engle To Ask
USBR Switch
WASHINGTON UP) Kep. Engle.
D-Catif.. suggested Thursday that
states or local communities be per
mitted to share In the cost of re
clamation projects.
Engle, chairman of ine House
Interior Affairs subcommittee on
Irrigation and reclamation, told a
reporter he plans to bring the mat
ter up for . discussion. , .
present law requires that water
and power users be able to repay
the full cost of the project within
a certain period. With certain spe
cific exceptions, the repayment
period Is 40 years plus a 10-year
development period.
"The trouble with that." Engle
said, 'is Uiat we have about run
out of projects that are rich enough
for the water and power users to
meet that standard."
"We should make room in the
law for the. indirect benefits to
local areas or an entire state to be
reflected in the repayment plan."
Engle enumerated the indirect
benefits of a project as Increased
retail and wholesale trade through
greater prosperity In the commun
ity, increased tax values on all
lands and personal property, re
creational benefits, and higher in
come taxes.
Storm Warnings
Cut Along Coast
SEATTLE Wl The Weather
Bureau ordered storm warnings
changed to smallcraft warnings
for south to southwest winds 20 to
30 miles an hour from Tatoosh to
oape Blanco at B a.m. Thursday.
The smallcraft warnings were con
tinued for the Strait of Juan de
Puca and Inland Washington wat
ers, with winds southerly 10 to 20
miles an hour, increasing at times
to 25-30.
ljMIIIMaMB
l CoatsnaoM From 1:45
JAMB MI 72W&
Bend
OF QX
JMMS
ftOCXMlDSOl
ITER
FLMEO IN OREGON
I
a
Ka II IHIII 7vfflll
UYONNE OlCARlO-raaiPFllMD.
0 V
Dlh. To The Lad it
Every Thurtdoy Nit
V6) ; !
BERT BUFFINGT0N (above), son of Mr. and Mrs. O. II,
Buffington, 2215 Auburn St., is a freshman at Oregon State
College, where he was recently initiated into Beta Theta
Phi. Bert is a pre-med student. He was prominent in athlet
ics at Klamath Union High School prior to his graduation
last spring.
Idaho Spud Growers Hang
Onto Crop, Wait To See
Where They Fit OPS Rule
BOISE, Idaho l.fl Have Idaho
potato growers been holdlne back
on smpmems Because of OPS ceil
ings? ' . .
State Agriculture Commissioner
David Stubblefield says yes, but It
isn't in the nature of a shipping
strike.
. "They read in the DaDers that
the Office of Price Stabilization
might make some revisions In the
ceilings and naturally they've wait-
ea to see what they were, stub-
Bank Customers
Make own Change
' YONKERS. N. Y. Customers
of the Central National Bank of
Yonkers now make their own small
change right in the lobby from
oowis oi pennies, nickels, dimes,
quarters and half dollars.
The bank started the innovation
Wednesday, with the bowls each
containing $5 in coins:
Bank President Gerald S. Cou
zens said not one penny was miss
ing at the end of the day.
"We believe people are honest."
he added, "and it reduces the work
at the tellers' windows."
JUSTICE BLIND
SANTA .MONICA. Calif. in
James W. Walker, 53. came to
court Thursday to plead that a
heart attack, not intoxication,
caused him to drive erratically
last Oct. 12. when he was cited
for drunken driving.
He stood up as his name was
called, then collapsed. Doctors pro
nounced him dead of a heart
attack.
CLASflTf! U'lt.h a rirecaaH.iin aii-f
Taken von almnlv vrvwha,ol
Fashion news In that bib-front
the skirt-panel continues the line.
Sewing news in the simple design
rIvaci In nna urltu Hll....
Make this your spring-day-and-dat-
cr. its inaispensaoiei
Pattern R9353: Misses' sizes 12
U 1A 1ft 90 Siva 1A 1T
yards 39-inch fabric.
mis easyto-use pattern gives
perfect fit. Complete Illustrated
Sew Chart shows you every Btep,
Send Thirty-five cents in coins
for this pattern to Marian Martin,
care of Herald and News, Pattern
Dnnl p n II", r-ut on
111. Print plainly YOUR NAME
nuunia zuinjs size and
STYLE NUMBER.
IMPORTANT FASHION
SIZES
blefleld said Wednesday
But Leland Black, Twin Palls
warehouseman, said the low num
ber of carloads shipped from Idaho
in the past few weeks Is In the na
ture of a strike against OPS ceil
ings. Black said shippers were moving
all they were getting but the grow
ers were holding onto their spuds
because they resent having to take
less money for them and are not
sure where they fit Into the price
ceiling picture.
However, shipments have started
to Increase again. Idaho shipped
210 carloads Mondav with 148 go
ing from Eastern Idaho, and yes
terday 177 cars were spotted for
loading in the eastern part of the
state.
The increase Is attributed to an
increase of 10 cents a hundred
pounds' which becomes effective
Thursday. It's designed to cover
shrinkage, although Stubblefield
says If. won't cover the entire
shrinkage. The ceilings will go up
.ii i " " umiuioiwHiim oiner contestant in preliminary
um" Ju?e- questioning.
. I From here they Intend to head
N - , 1 for the Marquesas Islands, the So-
O Trouble Seen ;cety Islands. Australia, Thailand,
r f . i India, the Suez Canal, the Mediter-
rOr lrOp Wages jranean. England, South America
i!S5AT...r,Seent fedcraMan"Wel7w?can dream can't we:
" annum cover most
Pacific Northwest wage problems
in the crop season of 1952 without
special Wage Stabilization Board
approval. M. C. Redman, of the
WSB Agricultural Wage Division
believes.
The farm formula allows increas.
es of 10 per cent, with ceilings of
95 cents an hour, or $175 a month
and allowances up to $50 a month
for board and room under the
monthly plan. Piece work rates
must correspond to the hourly
scale.
SHIPS COLLIDE
DACCA. East Pakistan (.fl A
launch collided with a steamer in
the Ehalrab River Wednesday
night and 33 persons were feared
lost. One body has been recovered
and 92 passengers were saved.
ROOF TROUBLES?
- Are you like to many others, bothered with torn of
mow on your roof, frozen eaves, or other weather
factori that cause leaks?
There is no need for it! Why have a roof that is goad
only when the sun shines . . . !
There is a roof thot is weather-proof . . , Summer and
Winter. In the summer it insulates . . .'Fall and Spring
it defies the most violent rain and wind storms . . . and
in Winter it sheds the snow like "water off a ducks
back."
Drive by a home proudly displaying an aluminum
Four-Way Interlocking roof. Note its freedom from
tons of snow. Observe, then ask the man who owns
one ... then call me.
MAIL TODAY!"" " i
I CARL MANCHESTER
I 614 Klamath Ave., Klamath Falls, Ore. Ph. 2-0213 '
I Pleeie have your representative cell la jive tree animate j
I an Initollotion of this revolutionary new. 4-way fnrerleckjna I
I aluminum shingle.
I NAME I
I ADDRESS !
"I
CITY STATE J
Royal Couple Shove Off
On Tour Of 'Down Under1
LONDON in Princess Hllita
both flow riff Willi hor huntlHoine
snilor husband Thuroduy on a 30,.
000 mile tour to the other side of
the Empire she soinaday will rule.
The princess and her 30-year-old
husband, the Duke of Edinburgh,
took off In a .specially converted
British Overseas Airways' Argonaut
for u royul visit to four Brltlatr
outposts African Kenya, Asia
tipping Coylon and the "down
Woman Hurt
In Accident
One woman received minor hurls
fnd one motorist was arrested
10m a three-car accident about
8 a.m. Thursday on Altamoiu
Drive between Boardinan and Del
aware Avenues.
Mrs. Eddie Richer, 235a Kecla-
million Ave., suffered head and
leg bruises and was tnkeu to a
physician's office after being
brought to Klumutli Valley Hos-
pltul in Ruler's ambulance.
Siie was pussengor in a I960 Ply
mouth coach driven soulli on Alia
mont by Henry Taylor, J-'Jb Mam
St.
A 1940 Chevrolet couch operated
by Alfred Hansen, Midland ltd.,
crashed headon Into 'layloi's ve
hicle while attempting to puss a
third cur driven north by Law.
renco E Nelson, 33 U Delaware
Ave.
State Police arrested Hansen for
fuilure to drive on the right side
01 the road.
Officers said Hansen swung
around Nelson's car when it slowed
down for another and smashed lino
Taylor's vehicle.
Mrs. Richer, a Reclamation Bu
reau employe, was In the front
scat of Taylor's vehicle.
After liming the Taylor car, Han
sen's auto swung around and
clipped the rear of Nelson's Ply
mouth, Police reported
Considerable damage was done
to the Hansen and Taylor cars.
Pair Set For
World Cruise
HOLLYWOOD (P Mr. and Mrs.
Luis A. Martlne-Lally of 8alem.
Ore., now have enough money to
set out for the South Pacific. They
won S2.280 In a quia program broad
cast here Wednesday night.
The Martlne-Lallys, wno set out
from Oregon on a round-the-world
cruise in a 25-foot boat last fall,
got this far, and then had lot earn
more money before setting sail
across the Pacific.
To get the money. Marune-uuiy
has been working as an electronics
engineer In Long Beacn, wnere
their boat Is tied up.
The couple sold the money won
on the quiz program would enable
them to sail as soon as they could
provision their boat.
Mrs. Marllne-Laily answered the
$2,000 Jackpot question on Groucho
Marx's radio program, after she
nnu her husband had qualified for
I tt by earning more, money, than
, If u. .ilM until ant
enough money we'd never have got
ten started, they said.
rain, oaieaa.
AMERICAN CHINISE
Fm el tfcett sMjatl
4 Far Ortjera T Take Oaf
Ban 6. Lee, Mgr-
KLAMATH
under" lands of Australia mul Now
Zcnliuul.
Por Ellmibrth and I'hllln It
menus five months of travelling.
King Oeorgo and Queen Elinubrtli
headed the party on hiind to wuvr
farewell to tlin young cnuplo. Sliiud
Ing In tho doorway of the plane,
the Prliice.is smiled at the group,
and at st'hoolchlliliiMi kiiiIu'iviI on
the airport. She waved, and then
the smile left her face for an In
stnnt as her eyes met tliosa of her
father
The King, standing a short dis
tance away, waved his hiind aa ho
watched Uie plane taxi to tho take
off position. Ha appeared to have
overcome mo.sJ of the traces ol
Uie operation on his lung.
EimaUeth and I'lilllp leu just
six weeks nfltir they leturnt'd from
a 75-day triumphant tour across
Cnmtiln and buck, with a short
side vl.lt to President Trumim In
Washington.
Primary Vote
Plan Proposed
WASHINGTON W A plan for
nuttumvUlo presidential prlinurics
went before Congress 'I Inn. (I.iy.
The sponsors. Senator DuuuliiH.
D-III., and Kep. Charles E. llrmicll, :
u-riu., sulci 1110 piuu would not
require a constitutional amend
ment, and could apply to the 1952
campaigns.
Primary voting, as envisioned In
the proposal, would not bind con
vention delegates but probably
would exert a "strong pcrsua.ilvo
Influence" on their decisions, Doug
lus and Bennett said In a state
ment. They said their purpose Is "to
bring about greater direct partici
pation" by the people in the nomi
nation of candidates for President
and Vice President.
Under Uie plan, the attorney
general would be directed to work
out agreements with the various
states to conduct presidential pref
erential primaries lor U10 major
political parties.
The federal government' would
share the cost of Uie prlmurles.
paying the slates up to 20 cents
for each vote cast. The slates
would provide election personnel,
registration books and other facil
ities. A 10 million dollar celling
would be put on federal expenses.
Police Seek
Missing Man
Aid of Slate Police here has been
requested In locullng the husband
of Mrs. L. C. Andenon. Bell Oar
dens, Calif., missing since Dec. B.
1950.
Leonard Charles Anderson. 23.
was described by Information from
Mrs Anderson as six feel one inch
tall. 175 pounds, bluo eyes, light
brown hnlr. rucVly comolexloned.
middle finger missing from the
left hand, a scar on left side of
upper Up, stooped from a back
Injury ...
' H Is experienced as a logger,
dairy worker and sheet metal
worker, t 1
Mrs. Anderson thought her hus
band mlgbt be in Lakevlew.
Poteet's
Market
Owned and Operated
By Bob & "Peanuts" Poteet
Bratton's Best
BACON
Lean Slab OC.
Any Size Piece, lb.
Skinless
Wieners'
a. 49c .
Pure
LARD
Carton 75c
Oregon
Sliced
BACON
Top
Quality. lb.
45c
DEPEND ON US
FOR
QUALITY
. Prices
Effective.
Friday
and
Saturday
More Die In Civilian v
Plane Crashes During
1951 Than Any Period
WASHINGTON I.B More per.
sons were killed In airplane accl
dents in 1IIAI than In any year In
Aiiiurlcun civil aviation history
Yel many of the scheduled airlines
t,oi Impressive safely records,
Even the non-scheduled or Irreg
ularly operated airlines despite a
fatality rale double that for 1990
Hew far more safely than m the
years before 1950.
The volume of traffic was record-
breaking, yet 'the accident rate,
estimated from preliminary sta
tlsUcs, remained III the neighbor
hood of that lor yean of lesser tlr
travel,
The Civil Aeronautics Board to
tals show that 321 persons died In
civilian air crashes last year, com
pared with m in 1950. 310 In 1949,
ll7 In HUB and 31 in 1947.
The CAB says there were about
14 airplane passenger fatalities
ln.it' year on domestic scheduled
airlines for every loo million pas
senger miles flown.
That compares with 1.1 In 19ii0,
13 In 1949 and 1948 and 3 3 In the
bad year of 1947.
But last year the revenue pas-
MMiKCr miles flown totalled about
10 1 , billion, some two billion more
than In 11)50 and four billion more
than In 1047.
For ihe non-scheduled lines, there
were 7.4 pus,enKcr latalllles per
one million passenger miles last
year, compared with 3.7 tn 1950,
Solons To Discuss
Rainmaker Methods
PORTLAND OP A staUUegls
latlvo Interim committee will sound
out opinion In March on what state
regulations are needed for control
of the new crop of rainmakers.
State Sen. Ben Day of Gold Hill,
committee cliairmail, said the
hearings would be at Medford,
March 1, and Arlington, March 33.
All types of attempts at weather
and hall prevention will be up for
dlscusMon, Day said.
v LEAVE
BAN FRANCISCO LP Adm.
Raymond A. Spruance and his wife
left via Pan-American Clipper
Thursday for Manila via Honolulu.
Ho la due In Manila Sunday to be
gin his new duties as U.S. ambas
sador. lrln lha fang . . ,1
ITS A SNAP
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9 lb. Shopping Bag - 75c
CELERY 10c Stalk
LETTUCE 10c lb.
CABBAGE. 9 c b.
CARROTS 2bu.l9c
Green Onions - Radishes 2 bu. 1 9c
1710 Oregon Are Phone 3860
18.3 In 1040 and 30.4 In 1948,
' The non-ai'hediiled lines flow an
estimated one billion piinnrngiT
miles lust year compared wlih
somewhat less than 780 million lu
1950.
Airport Waste
Draws Study
WASHINGTON IP More than
one million dollars lias boon loht
and one airfield has been aban
doned In the V S. Air Korco'n air
base construction program 111
French Morocco, the Senate Armed
Force "watchdog" aubconiiniliro
has been Informed.
A committee source aald Wednes
day both the Air Force and Army
have dent special Inventlgalors in
North Africa to find out the exact
reason lor the iossos.
He said the senators' expect to
bring up Ihe subject at a romiulttcn
hearing Friday, provided the Ai
med Services get the liiioriuutiu.i
ba.'k fiom Morocco In time.
Tho Semite group, heuiled by
Lyndon Johnson, D-Tcx,,, held hear
ings on oversells bases three weeks
agu In New York. At Unit' tlmnl
Ihere was testimony of "cousitiei "
able waste" In laying out airstrips
-flea with tfce bete ef
redtklR VMfteacel
Evarv Woman Has
.......
A rrice . . ner VCTallllV J
.mm
HARDFASTi J
BBAUTIFUU- fl
IDA IUHKIi i.
-l;sy;fi Tvyt imv iui
TO MAKE
A TREAT!
CARNATION
MILK .
3-4 jc
Chose & Sanborn
COFFEE ,b 83c
Pabst-Ette
CHEESE
45c
Durkee's Olco
Margarine ,b.27c
Free
Dalivary
On $5.00
Orders
Or Over
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