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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (March 29, 1954)
PAGE TWO HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON (Radio otog KFLW 1156 Kc. PSr . Monday Evening. March 29 oo Lux ludio Theater CBS : 7:00 Tht Lone Ranger ABC ' 7:25 Let Griffith. Ncwi ABC f 7:30 Henry J. Taylor ABC 7:45 Red Crosi Bloodmoblla Fgm 8:00 Sutpente CBS 8:30 Lowell Thoinai CBS 8:4ft Tennessee Ernie Show CB 9:00 BeuJatl CBS .- . f- . ' 0:13 Juliiu La Bon CBS 8:30 Preview of Tomorrow 0:49 Gueit Star . . 10:00 10 p.m. Headline ' 10:19 Lum it Abner ABO . x. 10:30 Kilocycle KJub 11:00 siftn Off Newa Summary 11:09 Sign Off KFLW MM Kc. P8T Tuesday, March 30 8:00 early Bird N i 8 05 Alarm Clock Club v 8:30 Hitter's Almanac 6:49 Ride the Bus 8:M Musle ' " 7:00 News Bkftt Edition 7:15 Charlie's Hountlup ., " 7:30 Trank Gobi CBS , 7:49 Harry Babbitt CBS 8:00 BMakfat Clua AbU 8:00 Blue Sklee 9:15 Chet Huntley ABC , 9:30 Helen Trent CBS . . 9:49 Our Gal Sunday 10:00 Better Living Club 30:15 Ma Perkins CBS 10:30 Young Dr. Malone CBS , , 10:45 Marion from M Ultra 10:55 WhUparlng Streets ABC . 11:15 Perry Mason CBS . 11:30 Nora Drake CBS i . 11:45 Brighter Day CBS 12 00 Noon Edition Newt 13: IB Payleu Sidewalk Show 12:3Q Houseparty CBS 1 ALAN ADD SHEUfY WINTERS i fiAiiTniirmail" I mtmi-mutum SH0RTS-CART00N-NEWS DOORS OPEN 0:30 NOW PLAYING! V lAM kd mm MUXE ANN WHL MILLER AND SEE A IAUGH ( WEDNESDAY ONLY! fgg'UHUBARB V 'Pqpn 6:30 p M LAST TIME TODAY MOGAMBO imGABLE.GARDNER TOMORROW! OENEEMNS-MTHIEEN NUOHCST FREE CART RIDES FOR THE KIDOIESI DOORS OPEN 6:30 P.M. NOW PLAYING! 1 00 Sam Hayes ABC 1:15 Arthur Godfrey CBS 1:49 Hank Henry Show 2:00 Arthur Godfrey CBS 2:45 Ted Malone ABC 3:00 Wizard of Odds CBS v 3:15 Ruth Athlon CBS 3:20 Dome Bell ABC 3:25 Untold Story CBS 3:30 Hank Henry Show 4:00 Grand Central Station ABC 4.25 Basin Briefs 4:30 Spin with Wynne 4:45 When a Girl Marrlea ABC 5:09 Edward eturrow CM 5:15 Heart of America 8:38 Today's Sport KlghlifMe 8:48 frank Goes CBS 6:58 Hometown News 8:00 Johnny Dollar CBS 9:30 My Friend Irma CBS 7:00 People are funny CBS 7:30 Mr tt Mrs North CBS 8:00 Two Tickets to Broadway o:ju Lioweu J-nomas ldb 8:45 Tennessee Ernie Show CBS 9:00 Beulah CBS 9:13 What Do Yoti Think? 9:30 Orchestra CBS 10:00 10 p.m. Headline 10:15 Lum Sc Abner ABC 10:30 Kilocycle Klub il:oo Sign Off News Summary 11:03 Sign Off KfJI 5 Kc. ?8T Monday Evening, March 29 8:00 Gabriel Heatter MBS 0:15 Evening Edition Local New 6:25 Hollywood Highlights 6:30 Virgil Pink ley News DLBI 645 Sam Hi yea News DLBS 8:15 Bill Hem-v MBS 7:00 Red Skelton Show 7:30 Sports Report 7:40 Derby's TV Report 7:45 Perry Como Show MBS 8:00 The Falcon MBS 8:30 The Railroad Hour 9:00 Newspaper of the Air DLBS 9:15 Fulton Lewis Jr. MBS p-.m Moonlight Melody Time S 35 Robert Hurlelgh News MB lew) Music Box Medley Time 11:00 Sinn off KFJI 1150 Kc. FST Tuesday, March 30 6:00 Sunrise Serenade 8:30 Farm Reporter 8:45 Sons of the Pioneers 7:00 Frank Hemingway Newi DLBS 7:15 Breakfast Gang DLBS 7:30 Today's Best Buys 7-4S rfrat PMHion Local NrWS 7:55 Something to Think About DLBI :dd uecu orown iwua 8:15 Bob Greene News DLBS S:20 Melodic Interlude MBS 8:25 Holland Engle News UBS 8:30 Breakfast Gang DLBS 8:45 Strictly Feminine 8:00 Melody Manor DLBS 9:20 Hazel Markel MBS 9:30 Carnation Milk Time hBS 9:45 Music of Manhattan 10:00 Newspaper of the Air DLBS " 10-18 Telln Test DLBS 10:30 From My Heart 10:33 Music 10:45 A Visit to LaPolnte'f 11:00 Cliff Engle news DLBS 1110 South Sixth fitrt VarlatlM 11:30 Queen for a Day MBS 12:00 TIds from The Town Shoo 12:15 Noonday Edition Local Ntwa 12:30 Best on Record 12:45 Notes From the Scooper 1:00 Matinee Melodies 2:00 Matinee Metodles 3:00 Matinee Melodies 3:25 Sam Hayes News DLBS 3:30 Guest Star 4:00 Join the Navy 4:15 Frank Hemingway News DLBS 4:39 Curt Masse Tleae MBS 4:49 Sam Hayes News DLBS 8:00 Sargeant Preston MBS 5:30 Sky King MBS 8:58 Cecil Brown MBS 849 Gabriel Heatter MBS 6:19 Evening Edition Local Newe -. 6:29 Hollywood Highlights 6:30 Virgil Pinkley News DLBS 6:49 Sam Hayes Newe DLBS 8:58 Bill Henry MBS 7:00 Red Skelton Show 7:30 Sports Report 7:40 Derby's TV Report 7:43 Eddie Fisher Show MPS - 8:00 That Hammer Guy MBS 8:30 Les Brown Show 8:45 Helldelberg Harmon a Ires 9:00 Newspaper of the Air MBS fJ Ifl Fulton Lewis Jr. MBS 9:30 Moonlight Melodies 0:33 Peoole HelDlne Each Other MBS 10:00 Music Box Medley Time 11:00 Sign Off Channel 6 KBES TV Medford Monday Evening;, March 29 3:M Devotions 4:00 Feminine Fancies 4:30 On Your Account 5:00 Uncle Bill Show 3:30 Val Rogue Show 0:00 Arm Chair Theater 7:00 Badge 714 . 7:30 Victory at Sea 8:00 Burns and Allen fl:30 Hank McCune Show 0:00 Dennla Day 0:30 Red Buttons . . 10:00 I Love Lucy , 10:35 News 10:40 Weather ' 10:45 Sign Off Tuesday, March 30 . 3:50 Devotions 4:00 Feminine Fancies 4:30 On Your Account 8:00 Uncle Bill fi:30 Val Rogue Show 0:00 Western Theater 7:20 Let s Kick it Around 7:30 Greatest Dramas 7:45 The Big Playback 8:00 Milton Berle 0:00 Captured 0:30 Bent Theater 10:43 News 10:30 Weather Forecast 10:95 Sign Off Train Plunges Over Trestle STEILACOOM, Wash. W In what the engineer called "30 sec onds of hell." elchl units of a 73- enr Union Pacific Railroad freight train plunged through a burning trestle Into Puget Sound here yes terday. The only casualty was L. Ft Pearson, a brakeman who suf fered minor burns about the eyes as he braved flames to save three carloads of bellowing cattle. Union Pacific officials placed damage to the trestle and to the cars at more than $300,000. Engineer William Boyce said he was highballing along the water side track toward Seattle, some 45 miles to the north, when he round ed a curve and saw flames billow ing from the trestle. He applied the air brakes, but the heavily laden train couldn't be stopped before the three dlesel units and 10 cars ploughed through the flames. The next eight cars dropped through to the water as Ihe trestle gave away. Pour c&rs burned. The destroyed cars carried wax. tires, refrigerators and shoes. The cause of the fire was not determined. ALONG NATURE'S TRAIL by KEN McLEOD .; . We left John Muir and party camped at the top of Gulllem's Bluff overlooking Tulelake and the Modoc Lava Beds In yesterday's column, the date was November 14, 1074. John has left for us one of the most delightfully descriptive nassages of the beauty of the scene from a vantage point so few people have ever taken tht tune or eifort to visit. , The next day we returned to Van's ranch," writes John, "but Sisson. who thus far had been oc cupied mostly about camp, set out alone for what he called a square day's hunting all by himself, de claring he would 'kill a ram before night.' Prom Rhett Lake, where we had camped, he struck directly across the lava plains for the mam sheep mountain, while Jerome drove around with the wagon. Van Bremer, Brown, Hepburn and my self rode over the sage plains, leaving the mountain on the left, hoping to find , our game on the way; nor were we disappointed. While we were riding, single- file in . silence through the rough lava and sage plain, Van's keen eyes discovered a flock of fity or more rams, ewes, and a few lambs. I was gazing at Mount Bremer, and the first Intimation I had was Van's dismounting and handing me his halter. The noble game was about three hundred yards distant and stood gazing at us. To the right wax a Jagged battlement of lava, to the left their grand mountain stronghold, and thev evidently were undecided as to which they should reach. The latter was safer, but it was further off. They turned this way and that, evidently frightened, feeling caught on account of the levelness of the plain In which they stood. Meanwhile, Van and Hep burn ran towards them crouching In the sage, and taking advantage of a slight swell In the ground. Hunter Brown, who was always doing unheard-of-things, had taken his rifle apart, locked it Into its pine box, and sent it back to Van's in the wagon. As soon as the hunters' heads began to appear above the swell, the watchful game saw the absolute need of moving somewhere, and an old ram led off towards the moun tain, all the others following slowly single file, about fifty In the block, and as they bounded on at right angles It formed a very ex citing scene. The hunters were now about, two hundred and fifty yards from them, and just as they got under full headway they drew up and took deliberate aim. Van. as.be sighted his heavy Colt rifle, looked exactly like the figures one sees on powder-flasks, while the tall, manly form of Hepburn, slanting back and taking aim, resembled the mast of clipper ship. They fired, and Hep burn's ram fell, a noble old fellow. broad and ponderous as a buffalo. Then bang went his other barrel. and his second sheep, a ewe, fell so suddenly that in the excitement she was not observed. Judge the feelings of poor gunless Brown, wit- nessng the fray, outwardly cool as ley Shasta, yet doubtless, like that om volcano, not wiuun. "The brave sheep were now boundng wildly over the - gray plain In a direct line "for their castle mountain, and a bright thought flashed into the brain of SEW-VERY-EASY t V TECS t 4 I 1 kTTTT TTi (OMIT Trwic!""1 gtfO ij waonirI1..-- Um" eh SMSEuiiia V My? & 1 1 w Brown: he would head off the fly ing game and drive it back to be shot. So he gathered up his reins, and, as if he were riding steeple chase, dashed his spurless heels into his horse's flank. But the lazy mustang had no enthusiasm and made but a feeble response tfl Brown's ardor, so after galloping madly through the sage at the rate of about ten miles an hour. Brown drrw rein in despair. Meanwhile, Hepburn's ram arose, and after staggering a few rods, while the hunters were reloading, ran firm and erect again with his huge horns thrown back over hs. shoulders. A second shot missed him and he fled like the wind to the shelter of the lava cliffs, the bullet probably having grazed bis skull without in flicting 'any permanent injury. It was a fine specimen of a full-grown lam, broad and massive and prob ably weighing three hundred and fifty, pounds. Just before he went down back of tho cliff, he halted. There his form and noble horns were clearly outlined against the sky.. "We little know how much wild- ness there is In us. Only a few generations separate us from our grandfathers that were savage as Mental Disturbances Of The Alcoholic Described (Editor's Note ' This is the twelfth in a series of articles deal ing with the disease of alcoholism and what Alcoholic Anonymous is doing to combat it.) . j By LYLE DOWNING An Associated Press dispatch to ih. Herald and News from New York Saturday quoted Dr. Seldon D. Bacon, director the Yale Center for Alcohol Studies, as saying: "r dnn't believe that alcoholism is ever going to be cured by a pill or a law." . Dr. Bacon made this statement in connection with the Alcohol Foun- wolves. This is the secret of our love for the hunt. Savageness is natural, civilization is strained and unnatii.-al. It requires centuries to tame men as we find them, but if turned loose they would return to killing and bloody barbarism in as many years. In the excitement and savage exhilaration of the pursuit of the wounded. I, who have .never killed any mountain life, felt like a wolf chasing the flying flock. But all this ferocity soon passed away, and we were Christians again." dation's findings in a search for a hangover remedy. ... The alcoholic researcher also verified recent estimates of the number of persons in the United States suffering from the disease of alcoholism as 4.000,000 of the nation's 65,000,000 drinkers. Alco holics Anonymous has reclaimed more than 130,000 victims of the disease. It Is' very interesting to learn that the Yale Center is concerning Itself with the hangover. However, thousands of victims of alcoholism would be more interested if the researchers were trying to find a cure for the nameless fears and' aberrations that affect persons in the aecute stage of the disease.- , MENTAL DISTURBANCES An alcoholic who is about to hit bottom could go through a doz en hangovers such as the social drinker experiences standing on his head. Victims of alcoholism suffer mental disturbances that make the conventional hangover seem nothing worse than a slight headache. A great many members of Al cholics Anonymous, since their re covery, have described some of these mental aberrations. Before MONDAY MARCH 29. i J they beat the alcohollo rap, 24 psychiatrists with an equal num-l ber of couches couldn'l have dragged the information out of them. But when freed from the alcoholic shackles they were will ing to reveal details concerning mental disturbances which they had previously kept a dark secret. They reasoned that fears of others might be allayed if they knew their alcoholic nightmares were not unique. Twice before in this series we have referred to the case history of Joe E, an alcoholic newspaper man, who Joined AA and made a success of it after a seige of de lirium tremens. Let's review what he has to say about mental dis turbances caused by alcohol. . NIRHTR OF TERROR Before he was finally stricken by a full-fledged attack oi me dts, Joe E spent many nights of ter ror alone in. his hotel room. He had two obsessions which he la beled the "FBI Horrors" and the "Big Magnet." . ' After he reached a certain stage of intoxication, Joe E would be mentally projected into some sen sational crime case as the central figure. The illusion would become as realistic as if he was watching it on a movie screen, Joe E would go through all the terror oi De- ing pursued by relentless FBI agents, captured and, hanged or sent to the electric chair. Restless sleep would follow. The "Big Magnet" was Just as terrifying to Joe E as the "FBI TJn.rnrc r Tin wntilH nftn wnlrn im in thV night and see a 'muL; bb.i lii in .1 ones he used to pick up pin. J when he was -a child. The would be in the window of huTl and its forks would be point?? ward mm. Joe E would hav. ,hiuw unm grip OB K bedstead to - keen Iron, J" drawn out the window. Just S it seemed he couldn't hold ?? Innnr- h. man,.! O--, - o'-"" wuuia IH. pear. . - . - Many a night Joe E sav k. In a hotel lobby to escape th Magnet" and because or It woT1 never sleep ih a room highoraJ one story from the street, riuiiareas or other member. A A A mi toll incf Be .7" J ma3HC lb, les of mental aberrations tunately, the social' or cont,), drinker has nothing more strw, in wnipu ollAIlt thaw t.. 1 v j "" nanffrnn. (Next-More AA experience CLOSED MONDAYS Ben B. Lte, Mgr. ' 9324 Prmcess dress plus a sun out fitall in me pattern! Look at the diagram only three main pattern parts to the dressl Best of all, it wraps around opens flat for easy ironing. Bra top and shorts are cool, easy just the thing on summer days. . .Pattern 0334: Children's Sizes I, 4. a, 8. 10. Site dress W, yards 35-inch; sun-set IV, yards. This easy-to-use pattern gives perfect 1ft. Complete, illustrated Sew Chart shows you every step. Send thirty-five cents In coins for this pattern for lst-clasa mail-1 mg. Bend to Marian Martin, care of Herald arid News. Pattern Dept. P.O. Box 0140, Chicago 80,, 111. Print your name, address, zone; sire, style number. FIRE MISSOULA, Mont. 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