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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 13, 1955)
PAGE TWO HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FAM.S OREGON TifURSDAV, OCTOBER 13, last 6 J' V t.rtnrwilHi EARL ESGATE, U.S. Army private, on of Mrs. Vera Bertrand, 5100 Bryant Av enue, has finished basic train ing at Fort Ord, California, and is home on leave. Esgate will aMend radio repair school in the Signal Corps at Ft, Monmouth, N.J, at the completion of his leave. 'BACKSLIDING FIRBMAN TOKYO I UP) Hanzo Sato, 32, was arrested on suspicion of set ting file to a tanner's houso and confessed he also started four other tires. Authorities learned Sato has an abnormal desire to start fires when ho is drunk. Sato is a fireman. 'Sodium Test Said Success ALAMOCORDO. N.M. LP A gigantic flume-colored "C" In southwestern skies a. letter esti mated to be 30 miles long has spelled success to latest Air Force probes of upper-atmosphere se crets. Scientists described last night's a.i "something never before seen a complete success scientifically." The spectacular orange - red plume, shaped by winds from 40 to 70 miles above earth Into the al phabetical symbol, was clearly visible i-inrn ihan 300 miles away shortly alter Its firing at dusk. The vapor trail, loamintr out of n special Acrobee rocket from two containers of metallic sodium, was visible, according to the Air Force, for 27 minutes. Complete technical results of the widely heralded test will not be known for "at least two weeks and perhaps longer." said John F, Bcdinger of the Air Force Canv bridge Research Center, whose officials worked with Holloman Air Development Center personnel In the test. The Air Force, In the experi' mem, was seeking to determine the oriGin. density, characteristics and altitude of natural sodium In the atmosphere part of the stuff that makes dawns and dusks "DENNIS THE MENACE" KIRK PREVENTION WAKEFIELD. Mass. (UPI A lire prevention week demonstra tion by firemen from six commu nities broke up prematurely Wednesday when apparatus from five of the towns was called to answer alarms. ray a MhrTOL .ss. m CEBCSW aSID33BaSD I iE? 1 IllbfilSS-'' COME IN TOMORROW FOR THE CLOSEST SHAVE OF YOUR LIFE Now the inventors of elec tric shovinq qivc you their newest and finest shaver. This mokes other shavers os outmoded as the old type slraiqht razor. Super Honed Hcods with Unmatched Sharpness Curved Combs with New Precision Hi-Powcr Motor With New Perfection TRADE-IN YOUR OLD SHAVER NEW SHICK REG. 29.50 LESS TRADE-IN 5.00 YOU PAY ONLY ONLY 75c A WEEK WEISFIELD'S JEWELERS 701 MAIN ;? n!eSonC?d T "ile nCr Scllkk "'5" m advertised ot 29 50 less trade-in. I am cnclosina $ and will send 5 per month or $ ,,Cr week until the entire halonce ,s Do,d I will recene mv ..uui-i.i nen i ormq in or send in my old NAME PHONE ADDRESS HOW LONG CITY ZONE STATE WHERE EMPLOYED HOW LONG CREDIT REFERENCES .. (Firm Namci and Where Located) I IWWy,,..! I .1.1 MJSZJIZL-'J3S! I 701 MAIN ST. I Stor Hours: 9:30 to 5:30 J Open Fri. 'Til 9 P.M. I MBiMisasHaMaiMBSiML J'&UY THIS (m.tm ITYmAOS CCRW'S HAJP? 6HINE !'j (Radio ojCf lEditor't Note: Th radio art Uteris, on stations teniae toil area are urged ta correct fthesf pro (train logt dally prior to areta deadline, frequently, iltwiri chanres occur too late for publica tion. The Herald and News ear ries this Information as a public service but cannot be responsible for the accuracy of the lots for the reasons stated aboTe.) KFLW-CBS ABC, lttt KC Thursday Evening, Oct. 13 00 Today's Sporti HlKhllghts in Amr 'N' Andy MuilC Hill CBS Ii:j5 New CBS 7:00 Gotlirey DiKftt CBS . ?:.(o i.ecwru unj 11:00 New CBS 8:0S Tenneiaee Ernie CBS 8::i0 Stand By for Muitc 8:4.1 Blng Crosby CBS U OO Lee Ztmmer Show ABC 9:'M Orchestra CBS I0"O 10 PM Edition Nft 10:13 Johnny Dollar CBS 10::i0 T1m for BrUxitlon 11:00 Sign Oil Newa Summtry Friday, Oct. 14 6 00 Minute Newi Summary 6:01 America Favorite Muiic C IS Minute News Summary i.:l(t America's Favorite Music Minute News Summary :;il America's Favorite Music B:4ft Minute News Summary :4ft Amerca's Favorite Munic 1:00 News Breakfast Edition 7:1.1 Dugan and Meit Show 7:30 Frank Goss CBS 7:4.1 Harry Babbitt CBS 8:00 Breakfast Club ABC ' It: 1)0 Blue Skies 0:1.1 Better Living ::t0 Helen Trent CBS 9:4.1 Our Gal Sunday CBS 10:00 Wendy Warren CBS 10:15 Ma Perkins CBS 10::U Young Dr. Mslone CBS 10 45 Guiding Light CBS 11:110 Slop 'N' Shop 1 1:1.1 Perry Mason CBS 11.10 Nora Drake CBS 11 4.1 Aunt Mary CBS 12 on Noon Edition New 12:15 Payless Sidewalk Show 12:.Mi House Party CBS 1 1:(H Arthur Godfrey CBS 2::to Hank Henry Show :i:00 Second Mm. Burton CBS .1:13 Miller's Matinee 3:2.1 Stop N" Shop :i ;io nuih Ashton CBS 3:40 MuilC ;i 4.1 Ted Malone ABC 4 00 Whispering Streets ABC 4:20 Basin Briefs 4:;t0 Today's Top Tune 5.00 Edward n. Murrow CBS 5.15 Bill Stern ABC 3 .10 V.Hy Listening 3:40 Weather Roundup 3 4.1 Frank Goss CBS Si.lS Hometown News 6 iiO Today's Sports Highlights fa 1.1 Lowell Thomas CBS b:;iO Amos 'N' Andy Music Hall CBS 6:3.1 Chevrolet Newt CBS 7 00 21M Precinct CBS 7:.iO Cues! Slar 7 4.1 Football Time 7:53 KLHS vs Meriford Ml: (Ml 10 PM Edition 10:13 Johnny Dollar CBS 1():;m Time for Relaxation 11:00 Sign Off News Summary 1:05 Sign Off IT FJ I MBS Jb Dt.BS, Use KC Thursday Evening, Oct. 13 00 Bob Greene News DLBS 13 World of Snorts ft -.1.1 Holljwood Highlights (iltO Local Evening Nfwa fl:43 Sam Hayes DLBS 33 Harry Winner DLBS 7:00 Sports Report 7:10 Timber Tales 7 1.1 Eridis Fisher Cokt Tmt DLBS 7 ,'to Boh and Ray n 0(1 Crime Flshters . B ;I0 Orririal Deterltve p. 110 Gabriel Heatter MRS 915 Fulton Lewis Jr. MBS fl M ji Jtniborse 12:00 Sign Off Friday. Oct. 14 fi 00 Sunrise Serenade and Litt News ft 10 Sons of the Pioneers B.43 Farm Reporter 7 do Hemingway MIS 713 Brrakfant Gang DLBS 7::t0 Today s Best Buys 7:43 Local Morning News fl.lHt Cliff Kt.gle K13 Morning Melodies w MMm Houquei icon Newspaper of Ihe Air 10.1.1 Tello Test in :t(l Vt-.lt to Dons 1o :3 Quickie Oulr 10 43 Visit to LaPotnte 11 00 Sam Hayes Show 11 01 Mtiitrai Manor 11 .to Queen for a Day 12 00 Tips from Town Shop 12:13 Noon News 12 Hi Best On Record 12 4.1 Town Ac Countrv Time 1 00 Wrstern Roundup I ; Malinre Melodies .1 33 Fhe Star Newsegst :t :m Mnilne Melodies 4 00 Telle Test 4 1.1 Hemingway 4 Hi Here's the Aruntr 4 43 Sam Haves 3 oo Traffic Jam 3 33 Newscast t on Hob t;reene II 13 World of Sports :'i iifn wood Highhihts I. ;m .o,-al Eve, News 4.1 Sam Hasea f 53 Harry Wismer 7 00 Snris Rnort 7 10 Timber Tales 7 13 PS rroeram 7 10 Boh A- Rv 7 33 KUIIA-Medford rpolball 10 .10 j j.mhoree 11 00 Hi Srhool HIVinx ll.JO Si" Off KBFS-TV CUsHRel I CBS, NBC. ABC ThurMUr Frfnlnj. Oct. U 3 30 Devotions 4 Oil remlnine Fancies 4 .10 Robert Q Lewis 4 4.1 Val ROue t'anerg 00 I ncla Hill Show 3 i Cham a. s I on Ore-Cat Panorama 7 00 SherlfH-k Holmes O Newspaper SPOT ADS are inexpensive re pes ltd dslly, Ts 7:30 Star and the Story 8:00 G roue ho, 8::t0 Guy Lombardo 9:00 All Star Theatre 9:30 Ford Theatre 10:00 Favorite Story 10:30 Damon Runyan 11:00 News 11:03 Sign Off , Friday. Oct. 14 .1:30 Devotions 4:00 Feminine Fancies 4:30 Val Rogue Camera 6:00 Aunt Polly's Birthday Parly 5:30 Wild Bill Hlckok 6:00 Cavalcade of Sports 6:45 Frank Leahy's Football Forecast 7:15 Heath's Medical History 7:30 Industry on Parade 7:45 Talent Time 8:00 Life of Riley 8:30 General Sportstime 8:45 Our Heritage 9:00 Waterfront 9:30 Pal Club Fights B: What Makes us Tick 10:00 The Line Up 10:30 Weather 10:35 Best Theatre 11:35 News 11:40 Sign Off Flyway Count Shows Rise Wlttprfnwl (runners "an Innt fn.. a good season opener If the build up In duck and geese populations continues 10 increase. According to the game commis sion northern flicrht? nro hnin ning to nvrlve In good numbers inrougn me siaie with large popu lauons oumung up in the marsh lanris nf tTlnmath T airs anH Ur... ney counties. A smaller build-up is aiso noiea in me, Willamette vmiey una, me coastal plains. 4 The laicest inrinv tnoV nla..n t Summer Lake where the latest uyway count shows about 32.000 hlrri.q in thA id c,,n,i, Whlte-fl'milei, frr.sva l,.lrin.i. green-winged teal predominate in the eai'lV fliffhlK. PintaiU halHnaia and green-winged teal predominate in the earlv lllffhl TSinlailc naM. pine, snovener, and mallard pre dominate In the Klamath, Willam ette ana coastal areas. Hunters are urged to be on the lookout for banded birds when the season opens October 22 and to return the Information to the pro per authorities. Approximately 3.000 birds have been banded by the commission this past month moitly In the Summer Lake. Sau vle Island and Nehalem Bay areas. Pheasants Freed During September Pheasant liberations were all but completed during the month of September with 29,750 birds re leased throughout the state In the past two and a half months ac cording to Vic Masson, chief ot upland game, Oregon Game Com mission. From Ihe E. E. Wilton Rame farm. 14,541 birds were released in suitable habitat mostly in west em Oregon counties. Approximate ly i.500 adult cocks remain at Ihe (arm to be released In the Wil lamette Valley Just prior to the season opener. At the Ontario game farm 15, 209 birds were released wlih the birds going to eastern Oregon counties where pheasant habila) Is available. 'Phonic' Speech Set By Patrons MAUN Dr. Elmo Stevenson. sident of Southern Oregon Col lege, will lie guest speaker at a meeting ol the Parent - Patrons Club Tuesday evening. October IB. at a p.m. in the elementary school sym. Dr. Stevenson's topic will be "How Phonics are Taught Today." Don Miller. Malin High School Instructor, will speak briefly on methods used in the remedial classes he teaches. A skit enlilled, "Happy Home or Otherwise" will be presented bv he Malln Garden Club. Rclresh ments will he served. Mrs. J. A. Bunnell, club presi dent, announces that room count will be taken. Visitors from other schools are always welcome, she added. Child rare is available - in a classroom in the same building curing ine meetings. FRKE fS RID MR TOLEDO, Ohio Bus users ill ride free In a :-block area ot downtown Toledo during t AO-day trial period beainmng Dec. 1. Part of a plan to reviuiue the down town district, the free riding is ex pected to yield quicker service thai may attract passengers to the bus system and boost revenues, bus company president C. H. Fors gard said today, State Rail Supervisor Battles For, Against SP By PAUL W. HARVEY JR. ipuls Western shippers In a worse , ,, . , position, because It makes it hard SALEM (Pi Clifford W. Fergu- r tn, thnm m .nmni tiMth Mid. ,,. "'' ' ', u"ul!I west shippers for Eastern mark Public Utilities Commissioner ets Charles H. UeJUel. is in an odd .Z, some feUef ...... t eiHl'mvmn B niu atiu n"""-" in iwo cases ne s Daiumor tne iooAs, The Western railroads nave Southern PacUic Railroad. But in promised us further ,rehef. another -case, he's fighting as hard as. he can for '.he railroad I . But " lne Efe railraads wm , ;this case, no relief will be possi- In opposing the SP, Ferguson lslblc, ani u,e utuali0n will be far preparing a court case to try to i worse " force the railroad to resume Its 0n ,ne olher sidCi nt lne dll.ec. Portland Ashland Dassenger licrv- iinr, i r-. d..i. ,i ce. And hen trying to find a way h s Emergency Transpoitr.tion W get competing rail service for committee. Ferguson is studying the SP in the Southern Oregon possible methods of Bettlii2 rail teriitory. iroad competition for the SP In Ferguson, however, regards ihe n- m,... i other case, in which he's support- p,.epare a case to take before the Ing the SP and other Western rail-j icc roads, as the most Important. j Fcrsuson says It will take him ... iuaus me ast.-Umj next February to prepare his ing the Interstate Commerce Com. .mm.iin.. d.i., w mission for a bigger slice of th" caused by the fact, Ferguson is in- w.voo-vuuuti; nuiH-1 voivea in mo treigpt rate ana otner ments, ca,e3 Ferguson, who returned from n ic nii-,n h i,,,i,r ....i.. Washington a lew days ago aflcriand grain industries to give him Opposing the petition. says the n leonl hkkhhitp in mAkinu economy of the Western stales bis competition study. u,u uc uumagca severely it tne - But he knows he's going to have Eastern railroads win. Ho civ i.m,... ,nu. tne tastern roads have a good The lumber industry, hardest hit chance, because they won a sim-1 by the freight car shortage, has laae against tne somnern ran- bcei divided lor a long time. Some rnnHs . .... . ... .. , jumoermen oianie tne of ana for competing rail service unless we are united. If our house is di vided, the ICC won't even listen to us,'' Ferguson said. : Bul don't expect this to j,, fr lied for a long time. Fergusm kno.vs he's In lor a lenoihu TT7 rrrnri DOORS OPEN 6:30 0NLY1 , ROSALIND RUSSELL i FERNANDO I AMAC t - i iwi i' sat jo- - THE roads. 'If the Eastern roads win this case," Ferguson says, "it will de prive Ihe Western roads of 9 mil lion dollars a year. "The Southern Pacific would lose 25 millions a year, and it would mean that the SP wouldn't be able to build the new freight cars that we so urgently need." ferguson is representing the 11 Western states in the case. "Ine West has been crippled since the end of World War II by blanket freight rate increases." Ferguson says. "Every lime there's a nationwide increase, that ivould do anything to get compet Ing rail service. But other lumbermen agree with the SP that the railroad is doing the best it can in supplying cars. There won t be any point in going before the ICC and asking DOORS OPEN 6:30 P.M. TONIGHT IS PELICAN SURPRISE NIGHT! PEE3 BREATHTAKING t GUY MADISON W wiiooh AM D KIRK DOUSUS -BELLA OARVI - GILBERT ROIANI THE RACERS In Qnma5cop s44 C PI LUXI r9' 1 I OPEN DAILY 6:0Q P. M ON OUR GIANT SCRtEWS OOHKl tNA WAYNE TURNER Shorts Cortoon ROZ IS BACK AND LOOK WHO'S GOT HER. ..in the year's moil, musical delight, set in fabulous Las Vegail color by TECHNICOLOR EDDIE ALBERT GLORIA DeHAVEN . mm rAiAwouKi nam S".-.Vj mill' "'"iaalr! ' CARTOON NEWS A DRAMATIC STORY THAT GOES FAR BEYONn A TEEN-AGER'S TRIAL FOR MURDER ........ I GLElFOI!D:DOrayftGUIf ARTHUR KENNEDY - JOHN HODIAK KATY JURADO WFp .KAFAEL.CAMPOS - JIUNO HERNANDEZ "CM M. UMIKI '4 Jj tmwmAm schnee. 'ZZT m W STARTS TOMORROW 1. l!HII3Uff. -SI rrt. Doort Open 6:30 P.M. LAST DAY!