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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (June 28, 1954)
PAGE TWO (Radio KTVH Its Ke. rsr . Monday Evening, June 28 0 00 Luk Ridlo Thttlre CBS 7.00 Th Lont TUnier ABC OOORS OPEN B:30 P " LAST 2 DAYS! 2 First Hun HiH fcrt LANCASTER MwrtcMwnrCtffT-DebmliKERR Frrt SINATRA -Dom REED ADULTS n, " Kiddie under 10 reeT DOORS OPEN 6:30 P.M. HE ITTTTTn HOW SHOWING! Thra werioty Aimricem girit in Kama, Mlina In love-eoch drfeenriy...och exotinnly! fVV CUFTON nun DOROTHY v McGUIRE LOUIS YjJS JOURDAN JEAN -MJ PETERS MAGGIE A - & aainn A AMrs75cKMt23c DOORS OPEN 6:30 P.M. LAST 2 DAYS! Aflki Storybook Woodtr Becomes Screen Miic! HEIDI T, Based on the book byWunneSpyrt ' Special Weif en Feature Kidt 20c Adults 50c Kids 20c 5 t)PEN DAILY 7:OQ F.M. L!i?y.-J!l!Xl 133 arm frilt till' m n MM PACHWKM Sps. f ettc Club Meett I o0 T-JS Lti GrlMitb ABC 1:30 Henry J. Taylor ABC T: Gusst Star It 00 My Friend Irraa CBS 9 30 Lowell Thomas CBS 4.1 Tenneur Emit Shew CM ft 00 Voice o( Flraston ABC jo Preview of Tomorrow 9:43 Desert Inn Orch. 10 00 10 p.m. Headlines 10:13 Bill Sterns ABC 10.30 Kltocyrlt Klub 11:00 Sun Off Newi luminary 11 03 Stjn Olf EFLW 145 Kc. P5T i Tuesday, June 21 00 Early Bird Newi C:03 Alarm Clock Club 6.30 Lou s Almanac r Ride Th Bus ISM Music T:00 News Break rait Edition 7:1S Charlie Roundup 7:30 Frank Goss CBS T:3 Harry Babbitt CBS f 00 Breakfast Club ABC P 00 Blue Skiea Ma Perkins CBS 9:30 Younf Dr. Malone CBS 9:45 The Penney ' Show 10:00 Chet Huntley ABC 10:13 Perry Mason CBS 10:30 Nora Drake CBS 10:43 Marian Tram Miller's 10:33 WhUperinc Street ABC 11:15 Brighter Day CBS 11:30 Helen Trent CBS IMS Our Gal Sunday CBS 12:00 Noon Edition New 13:15 Payless Sidewalk Show 12:30 Sam Hayes ABC 12:43 Arthur Godfrey CBS 3:13 Ruth Athton CBS 9::30 Phtl Norman CBS 2:30 House Pally CBS 3:00 Better Living 3:15 Hank Henry Show 3:43 Bjuin Briefs io:53 Dorese Bell ABC 4:00 Ted Mat one ABC 4:15 Spin With Wynne 4:45 When a Girl Marries ABC 5 00 Edward It. Murrow CBS 5:13 Voice of Calvary 3.30 Today's Sporti Htfhlifhts 3:45 Frank Gou CBS 555 Hometown News 6:00 People are Funny CBS 6:30 Mr and Mrs. North CBS 7:00 Johnny Dollar CBS 7 30 Bill Ballance TalcnU CBS a 00 Two Tickeu to Broadway 6.30 Lowell Thomas CBS 6:45 Tennessee Ernie Show CBS 00 America'! Town Meeting ABC 9:43 Desert Inn Orch CBS 10:00 10 p.m. Headlines 10:15 Bill Sterna ABC 10:43 Kilocycle Klub 110 Sign Off Ntws Summary 11:03 Sign Off KFJ1 - 115 Ke. HT Monday Evenlnr. Jane St 0:00 U a oriel Heatter MBS 6:15 Evening Edition Local Newt 9:25 Hollywood HighJifhU 9:30 VirgU Pinkley Naws DLBB 9:45 Sam ttayaa News ULBS U Bin Henrv tfBS 7:00 Bed Skelton Show 7:30 Sports Report 7:40 Timber Tales 7:45 Perry Como Show ttfcS 8:00 Under Arrest f 30 The Railroad Hour NBC 9:00 Newspaper of the Air DLBS 9:15 Fulton Lewis Jr. MBS 9:30 Moonlight Melody Tine 9:35 Robert Hurleigh News KB 10:00 Shady Side .of Midnight 11.-00 Sign -off itrji use Ke. rsr Tuesday. June 29 9:99 Sunrise Serenade :30 Farm Reporter sW Knni nf tnt Fiontfri 7:00 Frank Hemingway News, 7:13 srcaKiasi bang uln 7:99 Today's Beet Buya 7:43 First Edition Local News 7:55 Something to Think About : iecu Brown mma S:15 Bob Greene News OLBI 8:20 Melodic Interlude MBS 99 Holland tafia News MBS 93 Breakfast Gang DLBS :5 Strictly Feminine 9:00 Morning Melodies 9:20 Hazel Markel MBS 9-30 Carnation Milk Tun fcM Uit.4f nf Manhattan in nn KaBiafr of the Air DLBS 10:15 Telle Test DLBS 10:30 A visit to wettfteid s 10:33 A Visit to McCoukey's 10:40 Music 10:45 A Visit t LaPeUta's 11:00 LltlT Jtnfie news 11:10 South Sixth Street Varieties 11:30 Queen for a Day MBS 1S.-09 Tips from The Town She 12:13 noonasy s,anioa uuzm nw 12M Best on Bacon 12:45 Notes From the Scooper 1:00 Matinee Melodies 3:00 Lakeview Roundup Time 3:25 Sam Hayes News DLBS 3:30 Here's The Answer DLBS 3:43 Tello Test DLBS 4:00 Join the Navy 4:15 Frank Hemingway Ntws DLBS 4:30 p.m. Homes on the Land 4:45 Sam Hayes Newi DLBS 5:00 p.m. Bob Greene News DLBS 3:05 p.m. Bobby Benton 9 56 Cecil Brown MBS :99 Gabriel Meaner MM 6:15 Evening Edition Local News 6:23 Hollywood Highlights 6:30 Vtrgil Pinkley New a DLM 6:45 Sam Hayes Nwi DLBS 6 9k Bill Henry MM 7:00 Red Skelton Show 7 JO Sports Report 7i40 Timber Tales 7:45 Eddie Fisher Show MBS 9:00 That Hammer Guy MM 8:30 Your Chamber of Commerce 8:45 Helldelberg Harmon aire 9:00 Newspaper of the Air MBS 9:15 Fulton Lewis Jr. MBS 9:30 Moonlight Melodies 9:55 People Helping Each Other MBS 10:00 Shady Side of Midnight 11 AO Sign Off Channel i K BES TV Medfarsl Monday, June 28 3:20 Devotions 3:30 On Your Account ' 4:00 Feminine Fancies 4:30 Val Rogue Show 5:00 Uncle Bill Show 5:30 Armchair Theater 6:30 Time for Beany 7:00 Burns and Allen 7:30 Hank McCuna 8.00 Dennis Day 9:30 Masquerade 9:00 I Love Lucy 9:30 Badge 714 10:00 Weather , 10:05 News ' 10:15 Best Theater 11:13 Sign Off Tuesday, June 29 3:20 Devotions 3:30 On Your Account 4:00 Feminine Fancies 4:30 Val Rogue Show 5:00 Uncle Bill Show 3:30 Western Theater 6:40 Let s Kick it Around 8:00 Greatest Dramas 8:15 Best Theater (Double Feature) 10:00 News 10:05 Weather 10:15 Best Theater 11:15 Sign Off Lakeview Hears Neuberger LAKEVIEW Richard L, Neuberger. Democratic candidate (or the U. S. Senate (rom Oregon, was principal speaker Saturday at the dedication or ine new uu Countv courthouse. He described what he aald was recent timidity in political thlnKing, "Y2t the Declaration 01 inde pendence was a new idea, tne Emancipation Proclamation waa a new Idea, and the Oregon State Constitution of 1851 was a new idea. Are we to say that no new ideas are palatable" he asked. Accountants Name New Officers PRINEV1LLE T Martin A. Fitzgerald, Portland, Is the new president of the Oregon Assn. of Public Accountants. Serving with him will be Robert D. Benjamine, Orants Pass, vice president; .Richard P. McRae, Prlnevllle, secretary: and L, W. Oarlock, Portland, treasurer. Named to the board of governors at the convention here Saturday were: Alton Lenhart, Eugene; Harley 1 o. Young, Portland; William T. Wall, Lebanon; Emll Mueller, Tillamook; and Hugh McCredle, Portland. "DENNIS THE MENAGE U RIGHT, SO 1 DIDN'T PUT ANYTHING IN THE COLLECTION PLATE. IS THAT XKr? BUSINESS? Fourteen Dead In Air Crash MARCH AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. I An inveatieatlon was under way today Into the crash of a big Air Force refueling plane on Box Springs Mountain early yes terday with a loss of 14 lives. The KC97 strato Tanker ot the 9Sth Bomb Wing at Alms Air Force Base, Okla., struck the mountain at the 3,000-foot level while groping through a heavy overcast for a landing at Norton AFB at San Bernardino. The pilot had asked permission to land at March AFB here. IS -miles south of Norton. But because of a local overcast, the plane was directed by radio to land at Norton. Box Springs Mountain is between the two oases. After striking the mountain, the four-engine plane slid onto a boul dered ridge and burst into flames. Ninety minutes later around rescue units from Marcil AFB reached the scene and radioed that there were no survivors. The plane was on a routine train ing flignt from Altus. In addition to tne regular crew oi seven, u carried seven passengers. Archeologist Probes Tomb CAIRO. Egypt tft The recently uncovered Saqqara Sarcophagus proved to be empty yesterday but its aiscoverer uuiucs ne wui iina the real tomb of an ancient Phar aoh deeper within the pyramid. Archeologist Zakaria Goneim, who found the sarcophagus May 31 beneath a step pyramid he had discovered last December, said last night it was a "symbolic tomb ' and he expects "to find the real one somewhere else in the pyr amid." 'Any possibility that the tomb had been robbed should be ruled out," he said. The tomb was opened amid great secrecy yesterday, but a commu nique from the Education Ministry said It was empty. The ministry said work in the area, some 30 miles south of Cairo, would be suspended until late fall. After Goneim lound the seven- ton sarcophagus, he told newsmen he hoped to find inside "a royal mummy inside a wooden coffin ornated with gold." He believed It the last resting place ot Sankhet, a 3rd Dynasty monarch who reigned over Egypt about 2,150 years before Christ. Insure your Bouse and Household with Norland and save 2"c, (21 Pine St. 'Instead of needinc-foom ' for two ma chine, our new Beodii Duomatic does tne work of both washer and dryer in the space of just one. 1 love the idea of just putting clothes in and having them come out all waibtd and dried!" WHY M much aMhuilaim fee Hi DwemeekT Let t five yeu free tofnff9ffajfiesi gMeJ thew yen why BENDIX DUOMATIC waihtf-eryer I Of.'; I ADAIR'S FURNITURE 2200 So. 6th Ph. 7510 HERALD ANO tfRWS. KLAMATH 1 1 H. S. IREED has come from Eugene to be new manager of Singer Sewing Center, 631 Main. William Logidon, for mer manager, is now sales repreientative in this ares for this company. Mrs. Breed end their two sons and three daughters are remaining at Tiernan, Oregon, until a resi dence has been found her. They iplan to build later on Lakeshore Drive. On of hit first official acts was ad vancing Robert Birdsong to th position of assistant manager. y 'at ' (bM NEW POWER I ... first car to stop you soonest and surest in any situa tion. Just a toe-tap actuates Chrysler Power Brakes, safest you can buy! 5 lft!ley EsBnTidl BALLARD & BENNETT 0 239 Main Street FALLS. OKKGON Passengers Escape From Air Crash COLUMBUS, Ohio W-Jolm 0. Rankin ate bicaktn.st lodny Willi jti.M hi rlKlit hand. Ills In I hum! wii.i st til wrapped In heavy bund tiiics from tiU'tion burns received lust iilttht when he mid 30 other panseniiers slid down a rope from a burning American All linen piano that crash-landed tiller colliding Willi a Nnvy Bcechcrnfl hero. Two Naval Reserve officers died Burma, Red China Plan Conference Nliv DELHI. Indin in Red China's Chou Kn-hil tlcw to "Bur mu today lor the second phase ot his cxmpnliiii to nihil south A.tlnn neutral Into a Pelplng-oignnlted "alliance for peace." The Chinese Premier plans to prnd two days In Rangoon for talks with Prime Minister U Nu. Beiorc pushing on lo Peipluu . Ills throe-day visit to India left stein-laced Chou well entrenched with Prime Minister Nehru's gov eminent. Chou climaxed his stay hero by suRKesting that Asian chiels oi state get together periodically to work for peace and to evolve "mu tual respect' pacts similar to the one India had signed with China April S9 to guvem relations with Communist-occupied Tibet. I Chou's proposal lor an Asian get-together drew no distinctions i between Communist and non-Corn- munlst nations. He said it applied ; to the "principal Asian countries." i lie told newsmen In a press con-! fcrence statement: "It is my view Hint, in order to seek common measures lor the maintenance of peace and security in Asia, II Is desirable for tho appropriate per sons ol Hie principal Asian coun tries to meet occasionally and to consult with one another." Both Chou and Nehru intimated that their declarations of mutual friendship and cooperation were only a beginning In closer rela tions. Sources close lo Chou's light, mouthed delegation arrived at this estimate ot the Chinese leader's plan: Chou hopes with India's active assistance to build a stout Asian wall both politically and economi cally and thus oust Western in terests, i The keystone of his program Is "Asia for the Asians" and Its aim : is to coil) bat so-called colonialism. Economio cooperation will play an equal part with political under-. funding, because Chou Is under orders to find through Asian sources a aubstltute for China's1 needs blocked by Western embar-i goes. The Informants said that was why Chou brought a group of econ-, omic experts here to sound out the possibilities of expanded economic i relations . between the two 1 countries. (35 NEW POWER! ... first ear U "shift for itself" without any whine, lag or jerk. Possible only with PowerFTita: moll automatic no-clutch drive of all I The power of leadership Is In the crash. Rankin. M-year-old Louisville. Ky.i employe ol a fishing Incklo In in. slid lo snlely alter a woman passenger stalled 111 Ironl of him, Alrnkt u tho 'JS-loot tope plunge. "Lady," he told her, "we've got lo go." Ho said he grabbed her will) his right arm and slid down tho tope by his tell hand. He auflered severe hand burns. Eyewitnesses on the ground aald the Nnvy plane exploded ill It "ball of fire," spattering burning debris In the dusk, then crashed Just oa.n ol lite I'urt Columbus Airport, 'lite dead were Identified ns LI. Cindr. John R. HueraUi, 35, of iiiarby Westervlllc and 1,1. Cmdr. Donald O. Kdgar, 48. ol Columbus. dipt. J. C. Pollard. 3i, of Nash ville, pilot ol the American Air lines passenger Convalr, brought his ship ttulcly lo cm Hi. Us wings were flaming from gasoline spilled In the crush and (he lelt engine was torn loose. Crippled uiul burning, the Con. vair skidded across tlio l'orl Co lumbus runway on lis nose." Trapped liutrie by a damaged exit door up front near the nose, tin. passengers and Hirer crew members escaped down a course roe 115 teet lo safety. The salely door was orced open by slim, nubuiii-haired stewardess Martha Jane Ounn, li, ol Nash ville, Tenn. A baby was dropped Into the HIGH SCHOOL DIPLOMA AMERICAN SCHOOL, iasi IWIhwvad IIU4., t Anfilpi IS. 110. ?.?J Wllhnul obligation, tend me Free d- acttpma booklet and smplt itwon Kr t. ,N'm . . ..... .-.. Addrvu , Books in your field. Gardening and Homemsking. Special Reference Questions. Games, hobbies and sports. New books, ADULTS and TEEN-AGERS Klamath County Library BOOKMOBILE Schedules: Herald and News, KFLW, KFJI NEW POWERI ... first ear to relieve you of all real turning and parking work yet leave complete "road feel. Here's faff-lima Power Steering! you enjoy Only yours In a beautiful arms of Us iMienls, Mr, and Mrs. Arthur Heirman of Columbus, when UVv were unable to take the child with them down the rope. Investigators from Ilia Civil Aeronautics Board were expected to arrlvo today I rom Washington and Chicago to study the crash. The planes collided as both beared Port Columbus lor land ings, The Civil Aeronautics Authority hore said a preliminary reported In dicated both planes had been given "an okay lor sn approach but only the American Airlines plane had been given an okay lor a landing." Tho passenger piano waa bound from Memphis, lo Cleveland. Ohio. The Navy plane was returning to Columbus from Lalayette, Ind. One eyewitness, pilot John H. SSL nfjlhtff main SP'O . Klamath 'alls CLOSED MONDAYS Ben B. Le. Mgr. For oi little at $6 month ly, all books furniihed, you can now complete your Hiqh School educa tion in your spar time. mm j NEW POWER! ... first ear to boot riding comfort 200 over roughest going. Try thena wonderful double powered Onflow Shock Abaorbersl POW in a CHRYSLER N EW POWER ... the greatest you'll find, or feel, in any car today. Headed by 235 HP FirePowcr V-8 engine! This new drive power has set all-time new performance records at Indian apolin and Daytona Beach. Together with new power to steer and stop , . ,' you experience 'comfort and control not possible in other cars . .' , you enjoy in a beautiful Chrysler tho biggest real values that motoring has to offer today. Come see us and find out ' why anything less is "yesterday's" carl . CHRYSLER MONDAY, JUNK 2H, 1054 Corrlcr, 39, of Columbus, (aid Ilia Navy plane pulled up apparently on control tpwer orders to mk n different approach and crashed ln lo the front undersecllon of the passenger airplane. FIRST TIMI TONIGHT MONDAY JUNE 28th CARNIVAL AND CIRCUS ACTS Circul Grounds Division Street Klamath Falls 11 Auspices Klamath Basin Rodeo Atl'n. BIG DAYS 8 Monday, Jun 2S, Tues day, June 29, Wdnidr, June 30, Thursday, July 1, Friday, July 2, Sat. July 3, Sunday, July 4 and Monday, July 5th, 15 BIG RIDES Including th sensational New, "Round-Up" Rldet 10 BIG SHOWS SEI THE Three Daring BARRETIS Performing . 125 ff in th. air without nts or tofety . devices. Follow th twin searchlights to th showgrounds! WEST COAST SHOWS a?5 IoATla s Next vear'l convention will be at Corvallls.