PAGE TWO HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS. ORKC.ON FRIDAY, FCTRUARY 22, 1882 ri ! j i i KFLW 1450 Kc PST Friday Evening, Feb. il no Sports IllihUfhU 6:1ft lloma Town Newt 6:3ft World Naws hummary 6 :10 Suburban Beranade Hi Haadlln. Edition ABC r 0:ftft tianka Newa llounmip ABC 1 M Clllatla Fljhls ABC 6:00 Richard Diamond Anc . : Thla li Your FHI AHC t oo omi and Harriet ABC :.1(1 Concert of Favorites 10:00 10 P.M. Headlines 10:11 Dr. Ulno'a Musicala ABC 10:30 Inaomnla Club . . 11:00 Newi Summary 11:09 Slfn Off KFLW 1450 Kc PST Saturday, Feb. Z3 6:00 Slrn.On Neva Summary 6:05 Corn In tht Morn 6:45 f arm Fare 7:00 Newa Brkrst Edition T:lft Charlie'i Rounduo 7 30 Bob Garred. New! ABC 7:40 Top of tho Morning . 7:55 Music 6:00 No School Today ABC 9:00 Saturday Serenade 6:30 Space Patrol ABC 10:00 Lady Skyhook 10:16 went Anwriea Waa Playing 10:30 Shaka the Maracas ABC ' 11:00 Metropolitan Opera ABC 1:4ft Basin Briefs 2:00 Pan American nion ABC 2:33 At Home With Music ABC 3:4ft Fascinating Rhythm ABC 3:00 Junior Junction KBC 3:30 American Farmer ABC 4:00 Requestfully Yours 6:O0 The Navy Hour ABC ft:?0 Fob Crosbv Show 6:43 Errands of Mercy 6:00 Sports Highlights 6:1ft Home Town News 6:25 World News Summary 6:30 Science Editor ABC -'Ti ' "5 V - By JEAN OWENS "Off to Medford I" The halls were literally empty this afternoon, as many groups of hopeful and school-spirited students traveled over the Greensprings to view their team in action with the Med ford tornadoes on the Medford court. . The feeling is that this game is one of the main games of the sea son, and the Pels are really out to win, tonight and tomorrow night. As far as support goes, the stu dent body is behind them 100 per cent: arid they showed their high spirits ma send-off rally this morning at 8:30 in Pelican -Court. YelhVIed by the rally squad were loud and long. Townspeople are taking a lot of interest in this weekend's games, for many of them are planning to make the trip also. Not 'only: is basketball a. high light -of this week-end. but the KU wrestling squad will begin - their vie for the state high school wrest ling championship. Included in this tournament, which will be this Saturday at Bend, are the high schools belong ing to. the district 4 group. For- -several years now, the wrestlers have brought home the championship, It is suspected that they will bring it home again this year : with the fine materal and coach that they have. . . - Here's Wishing both of these teams the best of luck! Robbers Flee Gas Gimmick VANCOUVER, Wash, m Tavern - Proprietor Walter Lind strom put his fountain pen tear gas gun to the test early Thursday and averted a holdup. He told Sheriff Clarence McKay that he and his wife were leaving their -10-Mile Tavern, east of here on. the Evergreen Highway, at 1 a.m. , Asy.they stepped outside, they were confronted by three men. One flashing a gun, said: 'This is a , stlckup." He demanded the tavern receipts Lindstrom was canying in a cloth bag. Instead of handing over the money, Lindstrom whipped oui the tear.'gas gun he wore clipped to his coat pocket and fired it into the gunman's face. The three men fled jn -an automobile, he said. NOW CLARK GABLE Ava GARDNER Broderick CRAWFORD In MOM'S LIONEL BARRYMORE BEULAH BOND! EXTRA f : SAT USD AY 11:45 KIDDIE SHOW). J&DWQ0D TOREST TRAllli FIU8 ,.4 CARTOONS 5Q0OH0rtH'TU0Y-aW0lT aT M .. L. 2J---gNTeiUIMMgrlTWHILt YOU'Rt SHOPPINCpaassstalJJajL. 6:4!. Wordi. nf Lift 7 no Mr. District Attorney ABC 7:25 Miwlc 7:vn Dinner In the fren Room ABC B OO Lone Ranger AHC ;:K. Dnnring Parly ABC 9 00 Dann Vxnv A ML" 10-00 10 P.M. HeniUin 0: IS Brother Art Program I0-.T0 Innomnla Club . 11:0.) Newt Mimmaiy 11.05 Sign Off KFJ1 1150 Kc PST Friday Kvening, Krb. 22 6 (M Gabriel Header MBS 15 (Jim Show 6:30 Around Town New. 6:45 Sam lra-ve Nru ABC 6:U Bill Henry MBS 7:0.) M.lfs.e MhS 7:30 C.iCO Ktd MBS 8.00 liaikrtlM.il l ime t;:;r, 1'ikthl. Kl'llS vs. Medford 9 00 Glenn Hardy New MBS S l. r.xctiil. Rl'HS v. Medford (MS Fulton Lewis. Jr. MBS 9 53 5-Miniite Final MBS in on I ljvm a Mv.terv MBS 10:13 IT. S. Navy Band 10:30 Proudly We Hail 11:00 Nite Owl News 11:05 Night Owls Club 12:00 SiS il Oft KFJI 1150 Kc PST Saturday, b. 23 6.00 Musical Reveillt ti:j tana Reporter (. 5.5 Local New 7:00 Hemtnuway Ntw MBS 7:15 Breakfast Gang UBS 7:30 New 7:45 Best Buy 8:00 Morning Melodies 8:15 Breakfast Gang MBS 8:30 Haven of Rest MBS. U:O0 Emil'a Saturday Special 9:15 Dance Tunes 9.JJ Vcur Income Tax MBS 9:45 ravorites ot Yesterday 10;00 News MBS 10:15 Name Bands - .- ' - - 10:30 4-H Club . . li:43 OPS Program 10:50 CurrfiTs Program 10:55 Social Security Program 11:00 Music 11:75 News MBS . 11:30 Melody Time MBS 12:00 News 12:15 Mark Rogers MBS 1:1:30 Ricky's Request 1 30 News MBS ' 1:40 Music for Saturday . . 2:15 Music MBS 2.30 Band for Bonds MBS 2:43 News MBS . 3:00 Oklahoma Symphony MBS 4:00 OPS 4:15 Frank Hemingway. Newa MBS 4:30 Mark Rogers MBS 4:45 Twin Views of News MBS 5:00 Dude- Ranch Roundup MBS 5:30 Christian Science 5:45 Bandstand USA MBS 5:55 Baukhage Talking MBS 6:00 Newa 6:15 Quit Show 6.30 Assembly or God -7:00 Hawaii Calls MBS -.' 7:30 Klamath Temple ... . . .. 8:00 Basketball Time - ' 8:05 BsktbL KL'HS ba. Medford -- 9:00 News MBS 9:15 Bsktbl. KL'HS vs. Medford 9:55 Cecil Brown. News. MBS 10:G0 Barbershop Quartet Contest- 10:30 Arthur . Van Orch., MBS 11:00 Nite Owls News. 11:05 Night Owls Club ' 12:00 Sign Off Winnie Says Gif is Right Lunuvn "i ' - ....... - Churchill stoutly denies he did hi .ontin(T frAA ririps nn steamships and trams during his January visit, to the United States and Canada. .: He said Wednesday in the House ot Commons, "the gilts and serv ices of the Cunard (Steamship) rjompanv, as wen aa uiu&e w. United SUtes and Canadian Rail ways, were not to ministers but to the Brmsn taxpayers. i,uuacvi tivH sunnorters backed him up with loud cheers. ? , , j it: wna ubvb t-1 charges that he failed in his duty by "the acceptance of gifts from commercial undertakings." Laborite Col. G. E. C. Wigg had said that Churchill should have de clined free trips. tu- ,.ni,,H nt tv,A hnat rlHpis fflvrn Churchill and Foreign Secretary Anthony taen was i,im nuuuu (S4.905). The train trips cost con siderably less. (In New York, spokesmen for the New. York Central and Penn sylvania Railways said all their bills had or would be paid by the British delegation to the United . - . : . V. ..,1 Uu tVin Pa. nadian Pacific Railway. Giving r.sB tar,.rv.rtflttnn thpv said, vio lates Interstate Commerce Com mission regulations, i New HW farm WOODBURN. Ore. (IP) A pro- oosal to form a Pacific Northwest Farmers Union now is before the Oregon Farmers Union. Delegates to tne annual siaie cun vention reierreo tne proposal, which came from Washington and Idaho members, to the executive committee Thursday. Delegates also repledged eiiorts for a Columbia Valley Authority and reapportionment of the state Legislature on a population basis. They 'opposed a state sales tax and. daylight saving time. Richard P. Moeller, Cornelius, was elected president without op position. Directors- named were a don Emerson, The Dalles, and Gus position. Directors named were El Schlicker, Salem. . ' . CONTINUOUS FROM VMf an. IP? yia.iinli aanaa; aaaaasjaaaasai aiiailiai . v, BIBLICAL 'YOU ALL' Mrs. C. L. Hobdy of Dalhisr Tex., looks up from her Bible after discovering another passage making use of the phrase "you all." Mrs. Hobdy, after read ing the Bible from cover to cover, wonders if people chilled Paul for saying "you all" instead of "you Romans," but is sure the State of Texas is on the right side of God when she quotes from the. 21st verse, 22nd chapter, Book of Revelation: ."The prace of our Lord Jesus TJhrist be with you all." U.S. Astonishes World With Production Harks " By SAM DAWSON NEW YORK ufl Slipping stock prices and sagging commodity prices point up at least one thing America's staggering ability to produce. The raw material shortages (real and imagined) that developed aft er Korea are melting steadily. Abundance is succeeding scarci ty, in the nations factories Just as it did long ago in the retail markets. And signs increase that fast-expanding industry is approaching the point where ii can supply ail that civilian consumers will buy and . military consumers need with products to spare. As a result, wholesale commodi ty prices have dropped lower, on average, than they were a year ago. This has finally caught ud with some retail prices, as store aale ads show. , ' Winning Industrial canacltv is llckinir "fn. flation, business leaders contend. And stock market ODerators. wor. ried by the easing in the prices of goods and the profits of business, recently have marked down the stocks of some companies. on tne London stock Market, base metal shares were particular targets of bearish-minded traders a sure slen that thev. at least. think the days of shortages in lead, zinc and copper are numbered. Metals men here also report there are no lines of customers forming at their mill doors for some of their products. Makers of brass sheet and strip, for example, say demand Is def initely off. Their products are used by auto, electric, hardware and plumbing Industries. And output of these industries has been cut back in some cases by government controls and in others by slacken ing sales. Sheet and strip steel are In plen tiful supply, steel officials say. Man Killed Accidentally ONTARIO. Ore. W! Arthur ! Richard Colley, 17,-of Route Two.; Ontario, was accidentally shot and 1 killed here Thursday morning by his brother Walter. 16. who was playing with a deer rifle in the kitchen of their home, Malheur , County Coroner George Beechler i said. The accident occurred between 8-8:30 a.m. The boy died in an Ontario hospital at 9:30 a.m. The coroner said Walter told him he did not know the gun was loaded. The second time he pumped the action, the gun fired a ounet mat latauy struck tne 17-year-old he said. ; Anti-Knock Gas Curbed ,C..F. Leithoff Union Oil Com pany district sales manager here says his firm has limited sales of high-test gasoline rather than low er the knock rating. Leithoff said the government ra tioning of tetraethyl meant com mercial, gasolines would either have to lower the knock rating or ration sales and that his company chose the latter course. .In the overall picture, Leithoff said, California . crude oil produc tion is not Keeping pace with the demand normally .supplied from California. Price ceilings on crude oil dis courage the development of high cost production here on the coast, and product ceilings make It Im possible for the refiner to Import substantial quantities of higher cost crude ' oil from domestic, nr foreign sources. . . . , Arnall Sworn In As OPS Boss ATLANTA (pi Chubby, ener getic Ellis Arnall was sworn In as ihe nation's price boss Thursday. Tho 44-year old former Geor gia governor promised a "Brass Kruinlrn" illahl mi inflallnn he took the oath as head of tho Offce of Price Stabilization. i President Truman appointed him in ftlicceerl MtrVinr.1 V mBalla urv,A resigned to run for tho United States Senate In Ohio. The sugar-Dfoduclnor Islnnd nf Antigua in the West Indies has some of the finest beaches in the Their customers have as big In ventories of these products as gov ernment Inventory curbs permit. Speed The speed with which American steel mill capacity has expanded has astounded the world. Some other types of brass, steel and copper products are still In tight supply. And government con trol officials insist that the sud denly appearng surpluses of some industrnl products does nol change the over-all picture of defense needs. The government, however. Is re laxing some of its metals controls to the extent of permitting more metal to go In the second quarter to makers of such "less essential" goods as toys, Venetian blinds, cig. aret lighters, umbrellas and cos tume jewelry. Abundance Is also showng In some non-metal products that once were 'scarce. Controls are being relaxed on rubber and some chem icals. '.: Paper companies note a slack ening in orders, and consumers re port they can get all they want now. : The: annual meeting here of the Association of Pulp Consumers was told by Its executive secretary that the pulp supply situation, once tight, has eased. Price Cuts More price cuts show up In the belnbored textile Industry. Another telcvlson set maker is cultini; prices. Tramp steamer rates, which once soared becaure ships were scarce, are saggng down, as surplus ca pacity develops after the govern ment took 500 ships out of moth balls. The scarcities that remain some types of steel, aluminum arvi copper will disappear in time. Industry offlcals Insist, as the gi ant expansion program Is com pleted. Industry's ability to produce is being expanded even faster than first supposed possible. Shortages Just can't stand up long under thus ability, spokesmen for American industry se.y.- Consult with confidence ''i , F7r A H H. -aaTsaajaa Threat Seen For Alaska WASHINGTON Hep. Dorn D.-3.C..) believes Hint Russia has enouuh hum' air bii.ir.H and heavy t rutin foiiceiitrailoiis close to Alan Wit lo enable them lo land 100,000 troops ou Klk In the Aleutian Tslnnds. In a House speech Tuesday, Dorn snld he was told while In Alaska l.'sl year (lint 'JO RusHlnn planes were nceii In one (nrinntlon In sight of U.S. Territory in Alaska. 11 Kilssiu seised one alrileld In Alasku. he Miltl, Minneapolis. Cht- ciiko. Dot roil mid Hie industrial niuuvest would immediately be open lo utoiulc attack by the Reds. The closest common boundary uVlween Russia and tho United states, he t-ald, Is In the Bering Sen oil the roast ol Alaska, and we iihisi miiKe Alaska Impregna ble lo altnck." Dorn snld a Soviet attack on Alnskn would Immediately require the rushing of large numbers ot United Stnles Uoous and most ol our Air Forre to Hint territory, "and you would lose Europe and the Far Enst simultaneously." He s,ld there Is no doubt In his mind Hint If Jnpan could Innd 6.000 men on Klskn. as it did In the lasl war, Russia rould laud 100.000. Movie Mogul Spends Heavy Dough for Custom-Made tv v KK.SK1NK JOHNSON HOLLYWOOD (NEA) LAUGH TIME. IN U. S. A. A movie producer who has con sistently attacked television recent ly Invited some close friends lo his mnusion for a peep at his first custom-made video set. Surprised at his change of heart, the curious puis showed up and were ushered into the kitchen. "Cost me a grand to have II done this way." snickered the pro ducer fiendishly, "but I believe Hint a medium like television de serves a proper setting." His truest, are still goggle-eyed at what they saw. The producer showed them a rhlnlng new garbage can Into which n complete television set with a 30 inch screen had been built. Sign outside a Hollywood pel shop window filled with playful dachshund puppies: - "Get a Long Little Doggie!" John Lucas, the screenwriter, likes the story of the film producer who moved his dnughler from one rrlvate school to another, because of the stern discipline In the first. The new studies were easy, the teachers all graduates of psychol ogy and extremely kind to the pu pil, but she was unhappy and begged her father to be returned to the first school. "Its true. I didn't like being punished." she snld, "but, honest. Pop, I can't stnnd any more of be ing understood." Robert Q. Lewis took a blonde doll to sec "Quo Vadls." then hailed a tnxl to reaoh a night club a block awny. "Why couldn't we walk?" asked the beauty. "You're a young man," "But I'm not as young as I was when I went to see that picture," groaned Lewis. From the script of the new Ab bott - Costcllo comedy, ."Lost In Alaska." Abbott: "This H the fastest dog team In the world." Costello: "Why?" Abbott: "It's the way I've ar ranged them. This dog is Prince, this one is Bob. this one Is Spike, this one Is Willie, this one U Louis ..." Costello: "But what's that got to do with It?" Abbott; "The lead dog's name it Gloria." A mallre d' at a (op Miami Beach night club cornered column. Ift Hero Rau the other night and begged: "Please write something nasty Pleasant, courteous credit ...always! li Recer""!"" Hours: 9:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. COLUMBIAN OPTICAL CO. SURS,WflUCK ni tt.. ' "MUUJflM. '. ' tilt. W Airfti, Ni'U-4 jsJM.I.ii1.,Mtil tt$ltaU.,tmmn Dr. Omar J. Notfi, Dr. R. P. Mwpfirr, pr. ?rmer, pr. V. ft. ttftpii, pi, $. ltij tXi r-t '' " '5f! ' t '1 ft.' IT -' MIKE PRISENCE- Aelraaa Jin Slerllnf pnpum i hid liny mlcrophena for film Ini f Hellywtw) erewd leena. Mike ralchai dlalorue abev aliilurblnf txlranaeui leuaali. about our new band. Thev play an loud they drive mt nuts. Somebody orders veal and we go craty try ing to prepare an eel." Lyls Bettger, who plays the kill er In Cecil B. DeMllle'a "The Orealest Show on Earth," took his 10-year-old son, Frank, to see his new film, "The First Legion." Lyle asked Frank how ha liked II. "Not as good as the DeMllla movie. Dad." said Frank. "You didn't kill anyone." The Hollywood floods and warn ings about contaminated water have revived the atory about a fa mous movie executive who began his career, shortly alter arriving in this country, as a theater ex hibitor. One day he received an official now from a city official instruct ing him to close hli water foun tain in the theater lobby: - A few minutes later, the exhib itor put up this sign: "Through the cooperation of the City Health Department, this water unfit to drink." The Johnny Mack Browns lust had one of those allck. atreem lined kitchen unit systems Installed In their home. "One button." Johnny Is grinning, "controla everything except the children." Actor John Hubbard, back In Hol lywood for a role In "The Texas Man," tells It. During the short-lived London run of "Marv Had a Little," In which ho starred, Hubbard took a stroll through crowded Petticoat Lane. When he returned to. hla hotel, he found that hla wallet containing 30 pounds in English currency and 80 American dollars, had been lilted. A few night later, Hubbard re ceived this letter: "Thanks for the money to buy seats to your play. Enjoyed your performance. Please coma back to Petticoat Lane loaded very soon. Pickings are slim.' The letter waa aimed: "The bloke what picked your pocket." CHARGED WITH SPYING BALZBURO. Austria W Two persons were charged here Thurs day with spying on the U.S. Army on behalf of the Czechoslovak Com munist regime. Thev were Helm 811omon. a displaced person, and Margarethe Reysek, an Austrian, who were arrested last year. r," ' '. '' 1 t. ill b.:-or kaaf at .4naV i tfUul., Ot HEALY DiiDstnitr DR. HARRY R. SCRIINER ' " ' Opromttrlit , . f i - . 1 l2 H Taf t McCrary Battle On Television Program NEW YOBK W sen. Tnft ac cused. Commentator Tex McCrary or calling him a nar on a television program Thursday nlghl. The. audience booed and cheered ra the two men exchanged hot worda over a passage relating to President Truman in Tnira recent book. MoOrarv. who la backing Gen. Elsenhower lov lha OOP preslden llal nomination, sought by Tnft, de nied he had called Tall a lair. The argument waa on the Du inonl Television Network program, 'author Mr-el lha Critic.1' Crltlra Tad. ihn wrole. the bonk. "A Foreign Policy lor Americana," caa lha author. The critics were MoOrarv and Newapaper Column ist George Snkolsky. In the boon, Mcurary aain, inn senator "was careless will) the :ruth," To bck tin hla contention, Mc Crary aald the aenator waa wrong when he aald President Truman had not conferred with Congres on the Korean War lor weeks after its outbreak. McCrarv said the President had talked with nine Democratic and live Republican aenators "wllhln 61 hours" after the conflict atarled. Tail said bis own statement was correct "because 14 senators are not the Senate ot the United Slates" and added: "You have called me a lair when Steel Strike Threat Holds PITTSBURGH l The nation will escape a ateel alrlke Saturday but a walkout may come March 33 unless a bitter contract contro versy la nettled. Top strategy mnkera of the mil lion member CIO United Steel, workers did as expected Thursday In postponing Uieir atrlke. They Issued thla warning: "We hope that a strike may be averted but the patience of our members la running out." The union decided to cancel Us week-end alrlke threat In order to give the Wage Stabilisation Board more time to recommend a settle- ""The union headed by Philip Mur ray, also president of the CIO. hat been working without a contract since Jan. 1. The USW'a Wage Policy Com mittee. In unanimously adoptng a resolution of the executive board to set back the atrlke dale M daya, .,- I, .1... it an-la. thai final settlement will be fully retroactive to the contract expiration ante. Monk Fickle, Man Stabbed EI.YRIA, O. IT Miss Susan Bach, who told police she stabbed her boy lrlend because he alienated the alfectlons of her monkey-, was In the Loralne County Jail Thurs day. Mist Bach, 33, aald "Zekn," the monk, had been given to her three weeks ago by another friend, Since then, she continued. Sherman Big ley. 30, has been gelling man ol "Zeke's" attention, It all came to a head when tney argued In a cafe near her lion.j In Lorain. Later she slabbed blglty In the hip with a pocket rnile. Blgley was treated at a hospital and released. No charges have been tiled. Temperatures In Madrid, Spain, sometimes shift 10 degrees In a single day. liiioaooooo tmmi " i 1 S I g is i ,. THE PROVINCIAL In Fruitwood There's an air of old world charm in this AM-FM Radio-Phono. Undiitortad power output of 10 wottt . . . famoui Mognavox 12 inch speaker on inclined baffla with high-frequency dlffuser. Exclusive Mog navox 3-speed record changer has floating dual stylus for concert-hall tone. Band spreader tar sep arating stations. Add Magnavox Big Picture TV later! DeMftimtc Co. 20. N. 7th ' ' Phone 451 you llrnt opened this proposition, and 1 want you lo withdraw that statement," The studio audience , broke out will) boon and clieora and had lo be quieted before Hie program could continue. Reaenlmrnl j Sokolsky aald lie reseiiled "any one saying Sen, Tnft la llnr," McCrary, co-chnlrmmi of lha Madison Square Clardeu rally lor Elsenhower two weeks ago, then quoted Tnft as aaylng In his book that "power without foresight leads to disaster." MoOrarv laid Tall had proclaim ed himself lor the Marahnll Plan "once the Russian threat was ap parent." Adding that Tnft had tried, anme tlmes successfully, lo cut Marshall Plan funds from 1047 to 1090, Mc Crary asked: "Senator, when did Ihe Russian threat become apparent to von?" "You are saying I was agnlnsl the Marshall Plan," Tail replied. "I'm aaylng that I think It could have done as much good on half Ihe money." The senator aald he had been for Ihe Marshall Plan ever since tli Hie r "extent of Ihe Plan became clea Stassen Asks McGrath Probe NEW YORK tfl Harold E. Slasaen wants a congressional nrobe of what he calls "confident ial reports" that Attorney General J. Howard McOrath has become a millionaire during his 13 years In public office. Stassen'a statement brought thin reply from the Justice Depart ment, headed by McOrath: "Hie Attorney General aald ha has no dealre and there la no ne cessity to comment beyond thank ing candidate fitassen for Ihe com pliment." Staaaen. bidding for the OOP presidential nomination, spoke Thuraoay night at a National Republican Club dinner. The former Minnesota Gover nor, now president of the Unlver ally of Penaslyvanla. aald a tele gram he sent last Monday aaked McOrath II "persistent confiden tial reporta" were true that ha had become a millionaire during the yean of his public office hold ing. Stassen said the telegram alio aid: "If It li true, I further ask, for a general description of the prin cipal sources of your new wealth during theae years." Saying he had received no ans wer Irom McGrath, Stassen add ed: "I therefore ask that an Immed iate cnngresilonal Investigation be launched Inquiring thoroughly Ini i Ihe accumulated wealth of the At torney General and Ihe source thereof." ting the for coffee nf . . .1 MODEL 477-M Maplt or '298 50 i Garni western Hemisphere.