PAGE TWO HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON MONDAY," JANUARY 4 mi (Radio KFMV 1450 Kc. PST Monday Evenior, Jan. 4 6 00 Lux Radio Theater li& VD The I-one Ringer ARC 15 Lcs Grilfith, Newi ABC 130 Henry J Taylor ABC 145 Western Jar.ibore 8:00 Su&peruc CBS 8 30 Lcwetl Thomas CBS 8 45 Family Skeleton CDS 9.00 Beulah CBS 9:15 Mary Ford & Let Paul CBS 9 20 Julius La Rod CBS 9:30 Preview of Tomorrow 8 45 President EUenhower Addroi ABC 11.00 lu v m. Hcadllnea 10:15 Lum & Abner ABC 10: jO Sam's Otner Show 10:45 Kilocycle Club 11:10 Sign Off News Summary 11:15 Sign OK KFLW 1450 Kc. PST Tuesday, Jan. 5 00 Early Bird News 6.05 Alarm Clock Club 6:30 Hafter's Almanac 6:45 To be announced 6.55 Five Minute .:n an Open Bible 7:00 Ne-A-s Bkftt Edition 1:15 Charlies Roundup 7:30 Frank Goss CBS 7:45 Harry Babbitt LBS f 00 Br-ittiit Club AliC 8 00 Blue Skies 9:15 Chet Huntley ABC 9:30 Helen Trent CBS 9:45 Our Gal Sunday 10:00 Tune Time 30:15 Ma Perkins CBS 10:30 Young Dr. Malont CBS 10:45 Marion from Millers 10:55 Whispering Street ABC 11:15 Perry Mason CBS 11:30 Nora Drake CBS 11:45 Brifihtcr Day CBS 12 00 Noun Edition Newt 12:15 Paylens Sidewalk Show 12:30 Houseparty CBS 1:00 Sam Hayes ABC 1:15 Artnur Godlrev CBS 1:45 Hank Henry Show 2 00 Arthur Godfrey CBS 2.45 Ted Malone ABC 3:00 Wizard of Odds CBS 3:15 Ruth Ahhton CBS 3:20 Dorese Bell ABC 3:25 Ralph Story's Backyard CBS 3:45 Hank Henry Show 4:00 Double or Nothing ABC 4:25 Basin Briefs 4.30 Spin with Wvnne 8.00 Edward Murrnw CP .VIS You Were There 6:30 Todav's Sports Highlights 8:46 Frank Goss CBS 1here To Go TODAY! DOORS OPEN 6:30 NOW PLAYING! BA(Mt?i VVMiLV V Willi VIV MTlElGIl -Buddy Hackett 1011 HUMW-ttM MM CNOTKIRt Shorts Cartoon News QOORS OPEN 6:30 NOW SHOWING! IT. . ...ihS IF humphreyBOGHRTI NOW PLiYING! THE RAHGi IS I fCKIN'TO THISWIIPANP MNDERFVL wow, room VHVSICAU Gee! but ith Great; A mm u. WMTM TIM J P. ujB fr HUSTOHHOLTBhlTl W I WEDNESDAY jftLYl ilCv?.VS I O'HARA PyTYv E Mscdonila ATlNCt ' (0 ijKNiNO Sol day iShortt Can tn News Pi Jjoq 8 55 Hometown News 6 00 Johnny Dollar CBS t JO My Friend lrmi CBS 7 00 People are Funny LBS 7:30 Mr 8c Mr North CBS 8 00 Two Tickets to Broadway 8 JO Lowell Thomas CBS 6:45 Family Skeleton CBI B 00 Beulah CBS 9.15 What do You Think? 9:30 Eastern Orchestra CBS 10:00 10 p m. Headlines 1015 Lum1 & Abner ABC 10:30 Sam's Other Show l(i.45 Kilocycle Klub 11:10 Sign Off News Summary 11:15 Sign Off KFJ1 - 1150 Kc. rST Monday Evening, Jan. 4 6 00 Gabriel Heatter MBS 6.15 Final Edition Local News 6 25 Hollywood Highlights 6 JO Virgil Pinkley New. DLBS 6:45 Sam Hayes News DLBS 55 Biil Henry MBS 7.00 The Falcon MBS 7:;mj Sports Report 7:40 According to the Record 7:45 Perry Como Show sdUat 8:00 L'nder Arrest MBS B .'Al The Railroad Hour 9.00 Newspaper of the Air D1-BS 9:15 President Eisenhower Address MBS 9:30 Mutual Round. able Address Dis- rim ion Mub 9:45 Harry Wismer Sports rtbi 9:55 Five Minutes Final News DLBS 10:00 Fulton Lewis Jr. MBS 10:15 Music Box Medley Tune 11:00 Sign off KFJI J15f Ke. PST Tuesday, Jan. 6 6 00 Sunrise Serenade 6. 30 Farm Reporter 6:45 Sons of the Pioneers 7:00 frank Hemingway News OLBS 7:15 Breakfast Gang DLBS 7:30 Today Best buys 7:45 First Edition Local News 7:55 Something to Think About DLBS I 00 Cecil Bruwu MBS 6:15 Bob Greene News OLBS 20 Melodic Interlude 8.25 Holland Engle News UBI 8 30 Breakfut Gang DLBS 8:45 Guest Star 9:00 Record Rhapsody DLBS 9:15 A Visit to Currin's 9:20 Gabriel Heatter MBS 9:30 Carnation Milk Time KB1 9:45 Music of Manhattan 10:00 Newspaper of the Air DLBS 1015 Tello Test DLBS 10:30 Music 10:45 A Vuft to LaPolnte'a 11.00 Wonderful City MBS n.jj am m naye news hbs 11:30 Queen for a Day MBS 12:00 Tips from The Town Shoo 12:15 Noonday Edition Lo:al News 12:30 Best on Record 12:45 The Korn Kobblen 1:00 The Hour of Stars 3 00 News DLBS 2:05 Northwest News DLBS 2:15 Music DLBS 2:25 News MBS 2:30 South Sixth Street Varieties 3:00 Hughes Reel MBS 3:15 Tello Test DLBS 3:30 Jack Kirk wood Show OLBS 4:00 Broadway Review 4:15 Frank Hemingway News DLBS 4:30 Curt Massey Time MRS 4:45 Sam Hayes News DLBS 5:00 Sargeant Preston MBS 5:30 Sky King MBS 5:55 Cecil Brown MBS 6:00 Gabriel Heatter MBS 6:15 Final Edition Local News 6:25 Hollywood Highlights 6:30 Virgil Pinkley News DLBS 6:45 Sam Hayes News DLBS 6:53 Bill Henry MBS 7:00 That Uammer Guy MB 7:30 Sports Report 7:40 According to the Record 7:45 Eddie FLstier Show MBS 8:00 High Adventure MBS 8:30 Klamath High Sports Album 8:45 Heidelberg Harmonaires 9:00 Newspaper ot the Air DLBS 9:15 Moonlight Medley Time 9:45 Harry Wismer Sports MBS f:55 Five Minute Final News DLBS 10:00 Fulton Lewis Jr. MBS 10:15 Music Box Melody Time 11:00 Sign Off Channel R KBES TV Mcdford Monday, Jan, 4 3:55 Devotions 4:00 Feminine Fancies 4:0 Val Rogue 5:00 Uncle Bill's Ad vex lure Tims 5:15 Western Theater 6:13 Capt. Video 6:30 News 6:40 Santa Claus 7:00 BadEe 714 7:30 Victory at Sea 8:00 Burns & Allen 8:30 Hank McCune 9:00 Dennis Dnv 9:30 Red Buttons 10:00 Weather Weather In Nation Varies By THE ASSOCIATED TRESS It was warmer down the middle of the nation Monday Irom the Northern Plains to the Gulf, cooler in the Ohio Valley and the South east, rain fell in the Pacific North west, and the Northeast had a mix ture of snow, rain and freezing drizzle. Temperatures rose as much as 30 degrees from Sunday's levels in midcontinent. It was 27 above at Fargo, N.D., which had 3 below Sunday. International Falls, Minn., basked in a mild 26 above, after 12 below. Temperature drops of more than jo decrees were experienced in the Southeast, changes Included Nash ville, Tenn., from 51 to 25; Bir mingham, Ala., from 59 to 31, and Atlanta, from 55 to 38. Overnight, rain amounted to .73 oi an men at Tatoosh Island, Wash, and .54 at Newport, Ore. ' Central Pennsylvania had light ircezing drizzle, Boston had .70 of an inch of rain up to last mid night, and there was light snow from Western Pennsylvania north- easiwara to New England. Legal Notice SUMMONS LAW vn Kn7 IN THE CIRCUIT COCIIT OF THE STATE OP ORECiON FOR THE COI'NTV OF KLAMATH ..H.I ''J'"" rrliy. a minor, fcv and throuih her Guardian ad Lim. IJrl"- "" To W. H. Jonri, Defendant: In the Name of the stale of Oreson, ynu arc nrrcliy required to appear and answer plainllffa romplalnt on file here, in on or before Tucftday, the 8th day of January. t!M. and If you fail to to answer or otherwise appear, for want thereof plaintiff will take judgement oKnlniit you aa demanded In her com plaint, to-wlt: For the sum of S1.000. 00. toRcther with Interest thereon at the rnte of 6 per cent annum from December 2. 111S3, until paid, and for plnlntiffa coma and diitburacmenti herein Incurred, and that anv property attached or trarnlnheed herein. Wheth er real or personal, be told In the manner provided by law and the pro ceeds thereof applied to the aaUafacuon of plalntiffa judgement. This summons is terved upon ou he mihlication thereof In the Herald and Newt once each week for four consecu tive weeks .five Insertlonsi pursuant lo the order of the Honorable Tlavid R. Vandenherf. Judge of the above en tlt'ed court, made and entered the 4th day of December. IMS. the first pub llcalion to be made on the 7th dav of December. IP.Vt. and the last publication to he mada on the 4th day of January, 10S4. Fdwln r.. Dritcnll Attorney for Plaintiff Tina Tree Building. Klamath Falls, Oregon Dec, 7, 14, 21, 28. Jan. 4 No. T26 srnKn RUN YOKOHAMA t.fl A Japanese shipping company Monday claimed a new freighter speed record for the Yokohama-San Francisco run. The International Marine Trans portation Co , said the 12,000-ton Tsunrahtma Mani sailed the A.bM mllea in 10 days, a hours and 51 minutes. Official Secrecy, Snow Mask Interview Between GbuzenkOt US Spy Team MONTREAL W Strict official ,ecrecy and thick Canadian snow covered the tracks of U. S. Sena tors William Jenner R-Indi and Pat McCarran tD-Nev) today in their quest for what Igor Gouzenko knows about Soviet spying In the united elates. The two top members of the Sen ate Internal security subcommit tee, accompanied by two aides, ar rived here yesterday In a blaze of publicity for their secret meeting with the former Soviet code clerk whose 1845 flight from the Russian Embassy in Ottawa revealed a Communist atom spy ring in America and Britain. After a news conference and a closely guarded, six-hour parley in the Windsor Hotel with Supt. J. R. Lemieux of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, the senators and Lemieux slipped into an official car late yesterday afternoon and drove rapidly off Into the snow storm which blanketed Montreal. There was some specualtlon that Gouzenko had been brought to the Ford Due To Come Out In 7954 With New Models in Higher Horsepower Class By DAVID J. WILKIE AP Automotive Editor DETROIT wi New engines of higher power, a new ball Joint front suspension, a new hardtop model with tinted, transparent plastic roof over the driving com partment, and a four-way power seat are among features of the 1954 model Ford passenger cars. The models will be introduced in dealer showrooms next Wednes day. Prices are customarily an nounced at that time. However, there was no indication whether they would be higher or lower than 1953 prices. . Besides the other advances Ford also is offering power brakes, pow er steering and power-lift windows as optional equipment. Styling-wise emphasis is being placed on bright exterior and in terior body colors. There are 156 exterior and interior color combin ations and 13 single tone body Cops Watch Jail Breaker MARIANNA, Pla. Ifl Officers mounted a heavy guard over 3d. year-old Jesse James Roberts, no torious South Georgia automobile Ihief and Jail breaker, pending his leoerai arraignment today on a variety of charges. He was scheduled to face U. S. Commissioner John H. Carter this morning. The 6-foot-4, 265-pound criminal was captured without resistance at a Wewahitchka tourist court yes. terday, but pulled a gun from be. tween his lees and hocrnn firinc 4 wildly when an FBI agent and Jailer began searching him at the Golf County Jail a short while later. The agent said Roberts was be- ing stripped and It was "more or less a desperation move we were down to his pants and taking them off." Two shots were fired, no one was nit and Roberts was Immedl ately overpowered, the agent said. One pistol had been taken from him at the tourist court. The FBI add officers through out the South had been hunting Roberts since Dec. 20 when he overpowered a Jailer half his size and broke out of the Greene Coun ty Jail at Eutaw, Ala., where he was being held on charges of forgery. The FBI arrested Roberts yes. terday on charges of Interstate transportation of an automobile stolen at Eutaw when he escaped the jail there. ACID MEMPHIS, Tenn. Wl Classified ad In a Memphis newspaper: "Cafe lor sale . . . Owner has ulcerated stomach.", During EMIL'S TUESDAY Barbara Lee ttb Grapefruit 8 Lbag Campbell's Vegetable m Soup 2con, .; Hunt's 14-oi. bottle CatSUP 2 for Purex IW.UUI 1 gallon Veal Shoulder Steak lb. EM I'S hotel for the Interview, but the party's later departure seemed to indicate they were headed for a secret rendezvous. U. S. Ambas sador Douglas Stuart also attend with the group. McCarran had told reporters the four-man U. S. team planned to stay in Canada until "the mission Is completed." Jenner said they hoped to be back In Washington for the opening of Congress Wednesday. Jenner. the subcommittee chair man, said he and McCarran "are concerned with the Internal secu rity of our country." "We have information and leads and we hope that Mr. Gouzenko may be able to assist us in our work. We're here to find out all we can." Lemieux said no statement would be issued after the interview with Gouzenko. The Americans previously had agreed reluctantly to the Canadian government's de mand that it should have control over what is published about the meeting. colors, 10 of which may be ordered in 13 two-tone combinations. Upholstery materials Include broadcloth, vinyls, woven plastics and nylons. In some models con trol planel and front door garnish moldings are in two-tone colors with matching colored steering col umns and steering wheels. The new 1954 line engines are a 130 horsepower Y-block V-8 with overhead values and a 115 horse power six. The V-8 has been stepped up from last year's 110 horsepower. The six is up from the 1953 model's 101 horsepower. Both are of the short stroke, low friction type and compression ratio Is 7.2 to 1, virtually unchanged. Both engines, under development for six years, are claimed by Ford to provide extraordinary fuel econ omy. Ford's new ball-Joint suspensions is described by company engi neers as the greatest advance in front suspension in 20 years. It replaces the older type klng-pin suspension. It is designed to per mlt up and down movement of the front wheels through the ball Joints as the wheels travel over rough spots or directional movement as wheels turn right or left in steer ing. The 1954 Ford line consists again of three series Mainline, Cus- lomnne ana presume with 14 ooay styles. Added for 1954 are three new body types, the Crestline skyllner with front half of the roof of trans parent plastic; a Crestline fordor sedan and a new Customline two -door station wagon called the Cus tomline Ranch Wagon. This year, for the first time, the choice of V-8 or 6-cylinder engine is ouerea in ail models. uxienor cnanges Include a new grille with the Ford center spinner, recessed parking lights and Jet air scoop. Height of the front fend er crown has been Increased half an inch and headlamps have new diagonal slant. A single strip of chrome running the length of the car gives the new models a longer look. Retained in the new models are the jet-tube tail lights. Ford's four-way power front seat can be raised or lowered 1'4 inches and moved back and forth 4'i inches by means of two electric motors. The Fordomatlc automatic trans mission and the Ford overdrive also are continued rs optional items. Lariatt stack lead lag taaka plages la this part at the west Baal a aplaet pline. Btalal , par ehtte plan. HammaiHl Organ Chorel Oritm LOUIS R. MANN PIANO CO. 12 N. 7th SURPRISE! Maxwell House Coffee Drip or Reg. Mb. Hunt's Solid Pack Tomatoes 1Vl tin Nucoa Margarine 3ib.. Rinso Soap Ground Giant Pkg. 0 Beef Fresh Ground lb. SUPER MARKET - V 1 fej BIG BOOK COMING! Mrs. Margaret Simpson, cashier in Pacific Telephone'! business office, compares the size of the old Klamath Falls directory with the forthcoming "big city" edition to be distributed in March. Phone Book Size Boosted The 1954 Klamath Falls tele phone directories, which will be issued about March 12, will be the "big city" size for the first time, it was announced today by S. C. Bowie, manager of the Pacific Tel ephone and Telegraph Company here. 1 The new directories will be nine by 11 Inches and will have three columns of names and numbers on each page. They will also carry a complete alphabetical section on other surrounding communities, as do the present sized books. The current directories are six by nine inches, with two columns. The new dimensions are to be used "in order to keep pace with the continuing demand for tele phones in this area,'' Bowie said. He pointed out that telephones served by the Klamath Falls ex change have increased from 4,820 in 1940 to approximately 11,622, a gain of some 141 per cent. Dally calls have more than coubled during that period, Bowie said, from about 27,000 In 1940 to nearly 65,000 today. Portland, Oregon City, Eugene Springfield. Salem and Medford are the only other areas with the large sized books. Film Stars Wrangle Over Hamlet- Issue ROME tfl Film star Shelley Winters has walked out on her matinee - idol husband, Vittorio Gassman, after a quarrel which began when she thought there was too much ham in hamlet. "We had quite an argument," the blonde dramatic actress said in a Rome hotel Monday morning after confirming that she left Gassman at the least tempor arily at Genoa night before last. His interpretation of Shake speare's Dane displeased her and they quarreled, Shelley reported. OPENS NEW YORK W) A ceremony to day on the steps of New York's City Hall 'formally launches the annual March of Dimes. 9 Klamath Fold CLOSED MONDAYS Ben B. Lee, Mgr. Prices effective Tuesday only 9th and PINE No phone calls. PLEASE PNYMenOn Honor List Of Jaycees TULSA, Okla. 10 An episcopal bishop who uses an airplane to carry religion to remote Alaska villages and a Seattle geologist who was a leader in scientific work on the Juneau icefield were among the 10 top, young American men of 1953 selected Saturday by the United States Junior Chamber of Commerce. Bishop William Jones "Gordon Jr., 35, Fairbanks, Alaska's "Fly ing Bishop,", was cited for risking his life to spread religion tn the 536,000 square miles that, make up his diocese. 1 The Jaycees selected Maynard Malcolm Miller, 32, for outstand ing leadership in the field of geolog ical science. Others on the list were: Albert Schatz, 33, Fairlawn, N. J., college professor and research worker who had a hand in the dis covery of the drug streptomycin; Douglas R. Stringfellow, 31, Ogden, Utah, U.S. representative, for es. pionage and sabotage activities for the Allies in World War II; Frank Goad Clement, 33, Nashville, Tenn. governor of Tennessee; Walter Horace Carter, 32, Tabor City, N. C, weekly newspaper publisher; Carl T. Rowan, 28, Minneapolis newspaper reporter; Billie S 0 1 Estes, 28, Pecos, Tex., farmer and real estate owner; Dr. Lloyd Thom as Koritz, 26, Rochelle, 111., doc tor of medicine; Sgt. Hiroshi Mi uamura, 28. Gallup, N.M.,1 Medal of Honor winner In Korea. ' The 10 men will be honored at a banquet at Seattle Jan . BLAST FOTTSTOWN, Pa. WI An ex plosion followed by fire rocked the downtown Pottstown Monday de stroying the F.W. Woolworth Co. store and causing an estimated S350.000 in damages. No one was injured or killed in the blast and fire that came just a half hour before the store was scheduled to open for business. the MODEL ;y line the i .rates EVERY SHOE IN THE STORE ri" heat N SALE 1 ids hl MEN'S ROBLEES ALLEN EDMONDS PEDWIN FREE! One pair of nylon hosiery with each Troylina or Naturalizer purchose NO REFUNDS NO EXCHANGER the MODEL Christianity Instead Of Atom Bomb Urged As W Toward Peace In Vorldl LAWRENCE, Kan. M This na tion should try, to transform Its culture into a truly Christian one instead ol relying on such powers as the atomic bomb, Prof, Harold A. Ehrensperger of Boston Univer sity said here Saturday. "Our presidents and our secre taries of state have put their faith in stock plies of atomic bombs, and in their destructlveness we are pro mised peace,', Ehrensperger said. "The end thereof is too horrible to imagine." His speech was prepared for de livery at the final session of the fifth quadrennial conference of the Methodist Student Movement, at tended by more than 2,000 college students from all over the nation. "We have identified our religion with the powers of this world, and there are no true prophets to sound our doom, to shock us. into awareness of our sins and to stab us awake before we destroy one another," Ehrensperger added. Universities and colleges should put more vitality into the teaching of religion, four speakers agreed in a symposium Friday night. ' Bishop Donald H. Tippett of San Francisco said many schools "seem to be doing their best to keep God from being mentioned in the classrooms." Dr. C. Everett Tilson of Vander bilt University said the teaching of religion, "if it is to be tolerated on the campus, must be cool, unbiased and passionless." Learning should be fellowship, not combat, between teachers and students and among students, re marked the Rev. . Paul Deats of Boston University. . Jameson Jones, a student of re ligion at Vanderbilt, urged the stu dents to express themselves on is sues of the day. He said the stock piling of food that might be used Ceiieaata ' rgaBB tar very ata4 Complata una of musical Initrumaata . kylt meriea 103S Kale. Tour baldwin daalae Women's NATURALIZERS TROYLINGS CASUALS Do J 23 U XT" HaftAI l U 717 MAIN fr illy 1 et to feed the hungry of Ht tJ3 a moral issue and tht ft ' should speak up on it Hi l0'1 gested they make theml,7,i?l1" on universal military trtjrnJ it comes up in Congress, JJJ1 l.g Ig Wi rougl FOR YOUR SAVINGS adS, S TO EARN FROM THE 1st kg It SOlId: solid; vn 2 tU V era! eral rgia dyea IttfltaV u. AND LOAN ASSOCIl(ftmtt ,,, rnatl LATEST DIVIDEND 2 f AID AT H ANNUAl -j KATE OF. LI A II F riMYE ; tub SEE FIRST FEDEtsjr n U SI Blca nr. s r erica 1 (Am. mm mm 2 LI 1 wail. as M ini S Aineeol arha.au vj pi V Vrtgorc thern iflo A : MORE g.; 2 IN ' osyiv 1 fee u, 0 W , onier eleeee I ' SEE FIRST FEDERAmeid -7T DON'T MISS warm htietl In 01 DREWS Manstore STOREWIDE p linghi a C Al E w r r mwm-mtmmm T I PRICES SLASHED IN MENS, BOYS, AND fc"c WESTERN WEAR. BIGGER, BETTER ' THAN EVER. faint fa dcr 733 MAIN Fay. - Srbean 'le Mi BBgjgijgggBBjBgBgBgBmBBMmMwmmnotinp irarrlv SHOE E , iansa; STORE LADIES I ; HANDBAGS POf i tenj! 50 S ILEM ;rson, d run one i will Children' t Coll 1! Wedi l Tuei 3oard BUSTER BROWN PROPER BUIL" JUMPING JACKS V SHOE STORE I, I