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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 31, 1955)
J PAGE TWO HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON dietetic o0 KFUV CBS & ABC 1430 KO Monday Evening, Oct. 31 6:00 Today's Sporti IliKMighti U:15 Lowell Thomat CBS 4:M Amos 'N Andy CBS Newt CBS I oo Godfrey Talent Scouts CBS 7:30 News CBS f ;t5 Jack Canton Show CBS 8:00 News CBS II 05 Tennessee Ernie 11:30 Religion In American Life AI 8:45 Bing Crosby CBS 0.00 Sound Mirror ABC O.'.iO Voice of Firestone ABC 10 00 10 P.M. Edition 1015 Johnny Dollar CBS 10:30 Time tor Folaxatlon 11:00 Sign Off News Summary 11:05 Sign Oft Tuesday, Nov. 1 6 00 Minute News Summary (i:Cl America's Favorite Mumc ft: 13 Minute News Summary 0 lb America's Favorite Music 6:30 Minute News Summary b:3l America's Favorite Music 6:45 Minute News Summary h.Ui America's Favorite Musie 7.00 News Breakfast Edition 7:15 Ougan and Most Show 7:30 Frank Gois CBS 7:45 Harry Babbitt CBS 8 00 BreuKiast Club ABC V ihj Blue Skies 0:15 Better Living 8:30 Helen Trent CBS 0:45 Our Gal Sunday CBS 10:00 Wendy Warren CBS 10:1.1 Ma Perkins CBS 10;;!0 Young Dr. Malone CBS 10:45 Guiding Light CBS 11:00 Marian iroro Miller's 11:10 M utile 11:15 Perry Mason CBS ll::i0 Nora Drake CBS 11:45 Aunt Mary CBS 12.00 Noon Edition News 12:15 Payieas Sidewalk Show 12:30 Home Party CBS 1:00 Arthur Godfrey CBS 2:30 Hank Hrnry Show 3:00 Second Mrs. Burton CBS 3:J.'i Miller i Mf'lnco 3:25 Slop 'N Shop 3:30 nuth Ashton CBS .1:40 Music 3.45 Tod Mnlone ABC 4:00 Whispering Streets ABC 4:20 Biisin Urirfs 4:30 Today's Top Tunes 6:00 Edward R. MurroW CBS 8 15 Bill Siern ABC fi:liO Enny Listening 5:40 Weather Report 5.45 Frank Cos CBS 5:55 Hometown News 1:00 Today's Sports H'lhllghtS (US Lowell Thomas CBS ff:30 Amos 'N' Andy CBS (i:55 News CBS 7:00 104.000 Question CBS 7:30 News 7:35 Jack Carson Show CBS B OO News CHS fl.05 Tennessee Ernie CBS 8:30 Preview of Tomorow 8:45 Bing Crosby CBS 9:00 Sound Mirror ABC 0:30 Life is Worth Living ABC 10:00 10 P.M. Edition 10:15 Johnny Dollar CBS 10:30 Time for Relaxation 11:00 Sign Off News Summary 11:05 Sign Off KFJI MBS St DLBS, 1150 KO Monday vcnlng-, Oct. 31 B 00 Bob Greene DLBS 6:15 World of Sports fi 25 Hollywood Highlights 6:30 Local Evening News :45 Sam Hnyei DLBS 0:55 Harry Wismer DLBS 7:00 Sports Report 7:10 Timber Tales 7.15 P S. Program 7:30 Bob and Ray DLBS ' 8:00 John Steele DLBS (1:30 True Detective Mysteries DLB . D:u0 Grthrlel lira Iter DLBS 0:15 Fulton Lewis Jr. DLBS P:.10 JI Jamboree 11:00 Sign off Tuesday, Nov. 1 ft on Sunrla Serened; and First News 8:30 Sons of the Pioneers 8:45 Farm Reporter ' 7:00 Hemingway MBS t 7:15 Breakfast Gang DLBS - 7:1X1 Todays Bet Buys 7:45 Morning News 8 00 Ctiff Engle DLBS . 8:15 Morning MW t 9:15 Newscast MBS ' 9:45 Baiin Bouquet 10:00 Newspaper of the Air DLBS 10:15 Tello Test DLBS 10 30 A Visit to Dona 10:35 Quickie Quiz 10:45 A Visit to La Polntes 11:00 Kraft News DLBS 11:05 Muslral Manor 11:30 Queen for a Day DLBS 13:00 Tips from the Town Shop 12:15 Noon News 12:30 Best On Record 12:45 Town St Country Time 1:00 Western Roundup 1:45 Matinee Melodiei 4:00 Tello Teat DLBS 4:15 Hemingway MBS 4:30 Here's The Aniwer DLBS 4:45 Sam Hayes DLBS 5:00 Traffic Jam 6:00 Bob Greene DLBS 6:15 World of Sports 6:25 Hollywood Highlights 6:30 Local Evening News, 6:45 Sam Hayes DLB6 6:55 Harry Wlimer DLBS 7:00 Sports Report 7:10 Timber Tales 7:13 Coke Time wilh Eddie Fisher DLBS 7:30 Bob and Rav DLBS 8 00 Broadway Cop DLBS 8: i0 Treasury Agent DLBS " 9-00 Gabriel Healter DLBS . :15 Fulton I.ewn Jr. DLBS 0 30 Ctrl Srouti Nai l Convention DLBS 0:45 JI JAMBOREE 11:00 Sign Off ; KBKS TV Channel ft CBS, NBC, ABC ; Monday Evening-, Oct. 31 1 3:50 Devotions 4:00 Feminine Fancies 4 30 Val Hogue 5:00 Uncle Bill Show 5:30 TV Question Box 5:45 Gnrrten Home and Farm , t ii 00 Adventures In Literature 6::;0 The Aibland Pirn 6:45 Shopping for Fashions and Gifts .w muaio una 8:00 Burns and Allen 0:30 Badge 714 0:10 f Love Lucy 9:30 December Bride 10:00 Firestone Theater 10:30 Weather 10:35 Ret 1 heater, 11:35 News 11:40 Sign Off Tuesday, Nov. 1 3:50 Devotions 4:00 Feminine Fancies 4 30 Val Rogue Camera 5:00 Uncle Bill Show ... 5:30 Armchair Theatre 6:30 Boston Blackie 7:00 Big Picture 7:30 My Favorite Husband 8.00 The Greatest Good 8:30 Vou'll Never Get Rich 9:00 Liberacs 0:30 Let's Kirk ft immrf 10.00 804,000 Question :.u eamous iMaynouu 1:00 Ncwa 11:05 Sign Off 1 viv;w. MONDAY. OCTOBER Si .vr.-JU. -'mnm TESTING ASPHALT SAMPLES t the Klamath Fall. Air Force Base these employes of the Northwest Testing Laboratories, Portland, determine the strength of the asphalt that is being used on the runway extension and rehabilitation. In left pic ture Charlie Lane, right, foreman of the Klamath Falls opera tion, watches Harvey Morgan about to operate one of the testing machines. In right picture Jim Franklin is preparing to ' r test the strenqth of a brick of asphalt in a special machine which records the breaking point of the asphalt. The D-H Pav ing Co., Portland, is operating the aggregate plant and doing the asphalt work on the runway as a subcontractor for Morrison Knudsen Co. who have the overall contract for the runway job. , TREATED DOORS OPEN 6:-30 P.M. And MONA FREEMAN sw mm . oi HOPE MICKEY ROONEY MAXWHl nl'liltn'flVi Many rivers TO C3I0SS A ist ra Rita KAYWDRTH JOtl fiitm B'.'ECOS AIPlEf. Arcentin 11- rrovisional President Edunrdn I,n. nardl is recelvlne inealcnl trtat- nient in 4 Buenos Aires hosoltal. Lonaidl, 59, entered the hosnitnl Sunday, the government Dress secretariat announced. It said he would remain in tilts hosnltal 4a liours to completo treatment start ed before the revolution he led which ousted Juan D. Peron Sept. 23. HIGH TOKYO W Japan's inininK and manutacturing production Index reacnea a postwar high in Sep tember, the Economic Planning Board announced Mondav. The Index was 184.8 on a scale of 100 for 1034-1938 production. In August the index was 182.1. !The board attributed the rise to netive exporting and good harvest. Millionaire Shot Down Sportsman By Wife Who Thought He Was Prowler 1 a OPEN DAILY. 5:30 'p. III ! "Z i 1 JUMsmaScOPE V-y .MUSICAL COMEDY HITI m pmsm hmu-Ktt;is-BiMilS-HiriH C " "Willi C-; rjOORS OPFN 6:30 NOW SHOWING iJUmi: . """ 8 'ClNEMAScQpgwwtllCOtoil.,,,. 4 X O ' 111 p.m. Si-L TT6I r- "I know what you've Vlllt.ll - aiivi 11,11 4 you'll do to mc, BUT I DON'T f'j I a . CARLr yn ;? DOORS OPFN SO P M CRI00N NIWS OYSTER BAY, N. Y. lift Wil liam Woodward Jr., millionaire sportsman and socialite, was shot dead yesterday by his beautiful blonde wife. Between hysterical sobs she told police she had mis taken him for a prowler. The death was marked down as accidental pending further inves tigation" by Nassau County Dist. Atty. Prank Gulotta. The prominent Woodwards, married 12 years and the parents of two children, had returned home from a party In honor of the Duchess of Windsor about two hours before the shooting. woodward, 35, was the owner of the racehorse Nashua. His wife, Ann, 32, an ex-model, shared his enthusiasm for racing and was seen with him by millions who watched on television the $100,000 match race in which Nashua beat Swaps, winner of the Kentucky Derby, in Chicago last Aug. 31. Woodward Inherited Nashua and the. famous Bolalr stables at Bow ie, Md.. near Washington, O. C, from his banker father, who died in 1953. The couple also shared an Inter est In big game hunting. On an ex pedition to India several years ago, Mrs. woodward bagged several trophies, proving herscli to be a crack ' shot. It was a 12-gauge. double-barrelled shotgun that felled Wood ward Just Inside the doorway of his bedroom about 3 a.m. Polloe arrived at the low. ram bling 15-room home on the 60-acre Woodward estate soon after the shooting. Mrs. Woodward, crying incoherently into the telephone. had asked the operator to get help at about the same time that a watchman, who heard the shots, also notified police. The sobbing, hysterical wife was found on the floor holding the life less, unclothed body oJ her hus band in her arms. Police questioned' her as she struggled to control her weeping. Doctors finally gave her sedatives and forbade further questions. From her fragmentary answers and from questioning of others, po lice put together this story: At the parly for the Duchess of Windsor, given by Mrs. George F. Baker of nearby Locust Valley, both the Woodwards had talked about a prowler being In the neigh- Dornood. They believed he had al ready made two attempts on their home. . I The party guests agree that Woodward had very little to drink and his wife, nothing. Returning home at 1 a.m., they mspected the house, found all se cure and went to bed in their sepa rate rooms. , In case the burglar should come later, he kept a pistol beside his bed and she. the shotgun. Mrs. Woodward later recalled that her husband advised her to shoot first and ask questions later u sne snouid see the housebreaker, Mrs. Woodward said she was wakened around 3 a.m. by the Darning 01 ncr dog. Grabbing the shotgun, she crept to her bedroom door. Across the hall at the door of her husband's room she saw moving shadow. Without calling Old Farmer's Almanac Out Again With Predictions On Weather, Cooking Hints By 1IARMAN W. NICHOLS llnlted Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON (UP) Abe Lincoln is said to have won an important murder case by quot ing the old Farmer's Almanac on the whereabouts of the moon on a certain night. The record isn't clear Just where the moon was at the time. But there .s no challenge to the lac: thai the old Farmer's Almanac is still In business and todnv Is cut with Its 164th consecutive Is sue out of Dublin, N.H. Some of the old flavor abounds; A flavor that Robert B. Thomas, the founder. Instilled when he tame out wilh his firt etloit In 1193. Such as relying on nhpsra of Ine moon to tell folks when to plant potatoes. Predictions o( the weather which come from willing and often Irom the wotting ot the finger In the advance of a hlph wind. This sort of thing prompled a man from Nashua. N.H.. to write In about 30 years ago to say: "t have read the old Farmers Almanac for the past 7S years, and I wish the durn lool thai changed the rending of the moon's eolumn had oled before he done it." That hasn't kept a lot of old and iH'W-umcrs Irom racking up ihe Almanac alongside the calen dar and the mail order catalogs as things to look at Once in a ume. Weaiheiwlsc. in the saitv lan HUflRC of ycicrvcar, the picture looks lliuswise for 19J0. January will be snowy, cold, and rnmv will be no morning sun in July "it Just lasts all day." The 13th to 13lh days of July "will be hottest week of the vear. August will be sticky and sultry wiin some sionn rciie:. September "If these first days make the best storms will take care of the rest, with cooler weather toward the end of the month." ucioocr win oe normal, and November will be windy and cola wilh some snow and "please wear your wool vest." In December the snow "comes to stay" In lots 01 places. The colturs diag out some old wive s talcs, loo. Like on page 37 which says that when you sec tplder webs on lawns, ll will not aln that day enough to break the webs. "The red spider Is too wise to- work all night and have the rain spoil his Job. The hunting seasons are listed ty states by dates and it Is In teresting to note that a man mav go out and stalk bullfrogs wltlioii- any gulf from the game warden nom January 4 to October 31 The limit is 12, which is a pretty big sack full of froglegs. ahq 11 ycu gins ever come up mi 100a committee problem for U10 stitchin circle or the church, right there on page 4 it ens you mat a 14-Inch layer cak will give you 40 scrvinns. 1 particularly was interested in a little item which tells how to wash a black lace veil. You stani oy mixing 011110CK 5 gall with tnough hot water as you can bear your hand m. Then you pass your .Hauling io wnere you live. In veil through ll-and then ' 7" many naroors win trreie! Oh, well, ladle, you can look and the "Ire crackles like grandma; It up tor yourself. cackles." Mat ch is likely lo be I eoW one day and warm the next. "and lower all seils for tornadoes." MKDAL April will give a lot 01 xu "loci SEOUL m - Rear Adm. Robert 'Vhteh freezes the doa. spring 19; p. Hu'kev. chief of statt o! II 8 davs old and sull sno v." I Naval Forces Far East, Monday fr.inuevs in May. and rain anil was awarded South Koreas Order more ratu and "how sweet st.mrH : ni iii,ini.u ior,t T...,ir k. llie air." I -,tt-h,.t.-hnrlH rlUMV.rulmn' i ., June Is CXUCCtCd lo br n rnn. ', li.lnii,r hinl.l th. v.tta alomeialion of ci.nl iul nm I Piii4..,t s.-num.n ni,r. .j with thunder asunder" and Uiereuhe medal on Hickev. DERAILED VANCOUVER (UP) The Cana dian National Hallways' crack Van couver to Montreal Continental Ex press was derailed last night when the two-unit diesel engine struck a rock. A CNR spokesman said the en gine and five cars whlcn left the tracks remained upright. Early re ports indicated that no one was seriously injured. r any warning, she fired and her husband toppled to the floor, the right side of his head blasted by the shot. Gunshot from the second barrel hit the door. "Almost immediately I realized it was my husband," the widow told Gulotta. "I ran to him and fell on the floor beside him." Blood stained the front of her negligee. Mrs. Woodward was taken by private ambulance to a New York hospital. Her doctor reported, "her condition is improving over her earlier condition which was very bad. She had a bad case of shock." If her condition allows, he said, he will, permit police to question her again briefly today. The Woodwards' two sons, Wil liam III, 10, and James, 8, slept through the shooting. They were taken to their paternal grandmoth er's home in New York City without- being told of the shooting. The senior Mrs. Woodward is a prominent New York hostess and social leader. Her husband had been an ardent racing enthusiast and lor 20 years was president of the Jockey club. He built up the Belair stables but during his lifetime was unable to interest his son in racing. After his father's death in 1953, howevsr, young Woodward devel oped a keen interest in the sport. A graduate of Groton School and Harvard College, Woodward was a director of the Hanover Bank, where his father had once been president and chairman of the board. Young Woodward married Ann Eden Crowell in 1943 while an en sign in the Navy. She had come to New York several years before from her hometown of Pittsburgh, Kan., to be a model and try for a stage career. , f" L4MATH AIL OKICCM CLOSED MONDAYS Farmer Holds Out Againq Government Subsidy Plon, Defies Agents Over Fine OIL CITY, P- W-John Har mon didn't pay a bit of attention m .nv.rnment agents who told him to plant nine acres of wheat. He went ahead with plBns to plant 24 acres. Now he's in trouble. The government has placea a lien on his farm for WM.za. ac cusing him of violating regulations restricting his farm acreage. Har mon, 4, a Venango County dairy farmer, said he . won't pay. He added: I have never Tiad any part of subsidy. I have my own way. 111 be darned if I think this allotment and subsidy business Is right or American. I have my own Ideas about American rights. It sometimes makes me awful hopping mad and at other times, it Just takes the heart out oi you." Farmer Harmon's trouble start- ed last year. The government with Its "blasted forms ... and an kinds of red tape," as he put it told him his wheat acreage al lowance was nine acres. Harmon put in 21 acres. The Venango County Agricultur al Stabilization and Soil Conser vation Committee sent two of its members around to talk to Har mon. Then the committee auty bound reported to state headquar ters. Prom there the taf0IN. was passed to Washington." Washington officials Harmon owed 357.2j in J The U.S. attorney in tKJ tacked a $47 bill on for uSr Now both sides have suS. positions. Harmon said he i pay. The government mm k sell his farm If need be toi' After that both sides i j wait.. They still are at' tt" In Washington a legii . for the Department of ture said that while be miliar with the case be Harmon would be subject u Agricultural Adjustment ii' 1938, even though he hd cepted any subsidies. ' Harmon, his wife and . children nine girls and thraiL are continuing to work the I and feed the dairy herd. Hemimiitl Oreaa Chard Organ Ljrgett ftock lead ins make pianos in this pirt of the west Rent a Spinet pisno. Rental pur--huse plan. LOUIS H MANN PIANO ft 120 No. 7th ( v mm--- BONNIE t4e hzacM o Dog-E-Stu XA UNITED 4 AIR LINES NORTH Lrav 17:25 a.m. Portland 2Vz hrs. StaHle 414 hra. SOUTH Leave 5:70 p.m. San Francisco 3 hrs, let Angelei 5 hr. and to "all 1h East" Atrpfi Trmimt. h tfanw Mb rofl 3-7SS7, i-2559 f on vfhntd trwrtl agtnf, local times quoted jUNITEDf r -Thank, you, Klamath Foils, for the tremendous turn out to our Grand Opening this past week-endl We hope you enjoyed shopping our new store and we'll continue to bring you the same kind of values you found at our opening. Thanks also to our many friends and well-wishers, both individuals and business firms, for the grand floral gifts. We appreciate them! Tuesday Surprise Specials! Shop Low Cost every Tuesday for the surprises of your life? The prices are so hot we can't even print 'em . . . you'll have to see for yourself! Prices effective Tuesday only, to come early! - Sweet Clover Butter ib. Gingham Planters 2-lb. Jor Peanut Butter Oregon Trail 303 Cans Boysenberries 4 for Golden Wedding Coffee Western 1-lb. tins Paper Towels ; Chili Con Carne Rose Bowl Strawberry Preserves 20-ox. glass Bagley Freestone Peaches No. 2Vi 2 "Low Cost Beef "Low Cost Beef" Round Steaks Ground Beef 3 for lbs. Sliced Bacon lb. Cut Sauash Cello Pkg. Carrots "Shopper Brand" 2 Pkgs. Snow White Cauliflower head 0 "Where Parking is never a Problem' SUPER MARKET Town & County Shopping Center - 3710 South Sixth ,A