Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, November 01, 1955, Page 2, Image 2

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    PAGE TWO
(Radio
KFLW CBS hmC, lift! KG
TuewUy Evening, Nov. 1
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Wednesday, Nov. t
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Tuesday Evening, Nov. 1
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POOW3 OPEN 6:30 P.M.
LAST 2 DAYS!
Alan Ladd
Junk Allyson
Afc GONNKLL.
"CINEMASCOPE J
TO HELL
BACK
TECHNICOLOR
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Ship Battles
Alaska Seas
ANCHORAG&, Alaska W A
Nnvy tug Tuesday was cn route to
me side of the crippled Greek
freighter Macedonia reported
bucking heavy North Pacific seas
eolith of the Aleutian Islands. .
The Alaska Air Command said
the tug Molala wan dispatched
from Adak, Alnska Monday alter
the Macedonia radioed It had a
dnmaRCd propcllor blade and en-
glne (rouble. The ship was about
am miles oil Attu Island. The AAO
"said it may take three days to
reach Its side.
The ship was cn route from Ja
pan to Vancouver, B.C.
The Macedonia was the second
vessel to call for help in the North
Pacific Monday. The American
freighter Flying Eagle radioed she
had a leak In her hull but cancelled
the distress call when the steam
ship P and T Navigator arrived
at the scene to help. The Flyine.
Eagle Is an 8.199-ton freighter
owned by the Isbrandslcn Line.
DOORS OPEN 6:3Q P.M.
LAST 2 DAYS!
Jotn Jerf
CRAWFORD CHANDLER
SHORTS - CARTOON NCWS
OPIN DAILY 5:30 P.
0N0UHCIANT JCRkXMl
Short Cartoon
M.
'DENNIS THE MENACE
Government Quietly Drops
Tighter Credit Controls
WASHINGTON Wl The gov-i
ernmenl is quietly dropping- the
policy of ever tighter credit re
straints it has enforced most ot
Uils year.
Instead, it has adopted an tttl
lucle of neutrnl, watchful waiting
In the belief the dancers of imla
lion which brought on the tough
er policy may have been mas
tered.
If this assessment Is correct.
and if another inflationary blister
does not appear in cpming montns,
the possibility of a tax cut next
year becomes a strong probability,
The new attitude has become ev
ident through several changes in
government actions chiefly In
Federal Reserve Board policy
and in public and private state'
merits of government money man
agers.
A top government policy maker
.iaid privately today he thinks the
government's efforts In recent
.nonlhs to head off what It consld'
ercd excessive credit expansion in
Ihe stock market, home building,
CS Lists
Openings
The United Slates Civil Service
commission nas announcea exam
muttons for the following positions;
Engineering draftsman, $2,M0 to
96,390, and statistical draftsman,
42,960 to J4,52S. for duty In var
lous federal agencies in Washing'
ton, DC. and vicinity: and nurs-
ing consultant in maternal and
child health. 17 (70 a year, for
duty In Ihe Children's Bureau, in
Washington, O.C., and throughout
the united States.
To ouallfy for draftsman posl'
lions, applicants must have had
appropriate experience and-or ea-
ucatlonA sample of their work
must be furnished. Persons ap
plying for nursing consultant in
maternal and child health must
have had appropriate nursing
training and experience and must
be registered as graduate proles
slonal nurses In a state, territory,
or ihe District of Columbia. Mo
written tests will M given.
Further Information and applica
tion forms mav be obtained at
mnnv post offices throughout the
country or irom ine u.s. iivu
Service Commission, wasnington
ib. DC For draftsman noslttons.
implications must be filed w:in tne
commission s oince in wasnington
D C. For nursing consultant posl
Hons, applications must be filed
with Ihe Board of U.S. Civil Serv
ice Examiners. Children s Bureau
Department of Health, Education,
and Welfare, Washington 15, D.C.
ADnlicatlons will be accepted until
further notice.
Dunsmuir Hold
Party Parade
DUNb.MUm WlL-hes, space
men, assorted animals, dancing
glrW, clowns, tramps and a va
riety of spooks turned out en
masse for the Halloween parade
held in downtown Dunsmuir on
Saturday afternoon. The event, an
Inspiration ot Mrs. Marie Qlover
of Marie's Dress shop, was a great
success wltn Ice cream bars and
balloons tor about 300 parttcipat
ing youngsters.
The Judges who will probably be
haunted lor days faced a terrific
ta.sk iu awarding prltes. Bravely
attacking the job were Mrs. Jose
phine McOee, Mrs. Emma Smith
uiid Mrs. Harriet Spataiora. Iden
tification of prize winners was at
tempted Ihcn given up.
AsMstliig m keeping a semblance
of order were meinbera of ele
mentary school PTA Including Mrs
Veronica Kelby, Mrs. Claudia Ma
i her. Mrs. R. Ellis, Mra. Lola
Rechtrl. Mis. E. I. Tausch and
Mrs. Belly Van Wormer.
Dunsmuir police did a bit ot
tood natured traffic directing.
m:v trailer park
A 30-unit trailer park Is under
construction at U30 South Sixth
Street at the rear of Oigler'a Mar
ket Ownei and operator will be
A. R. Ctiiiltr,- The new operation
will be known as the Silver lip
Trailer Court and will be ready
lor occupancy In 10 days or two
weeks. Grounds are being covered
with cinders and a pumice tile
building for a laundry Is under
construction. Room Is available tor
expansion.
HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
1 1
and other fields had "taken a lot
of steam" out of the incipient in
flationary pressures of last sum
mer. , .
He would not talk about the fu
ture course of policy, but he agreed
with a description of the govern
ment position at present as "a
withdrawal to neutrality."
This does not mean necessarily
that restrictions already in lorcc
will be abandoned ur even signifi
cantly, relaxed in the near future.
It merely means that new restric
tions are unlikely, and that there
will be a continued effort to keep
Ihe restrictions now in force from
creating any credit drought.
witn innationsry pressures off,
and revenues from high level
business activity large enough to
insure a balanced budget by next
June 30. the administration would
have little reason, if any, to buck
Ihe election year tax cut fever
bound to be strong In Congress ear
ly next year.
The administration has made the
fight against further depreciation
of the dollar through inflation the
backbone of its economic policy.
A tax cut while Inflationary pres
sures were building up would tend
lo increase inflation by raising
purchasing power.
A very high administration offi
cial said in a recent private talk
that in his opinion President Ei
senhower would "have the politi
cal courage" to veto any tax cut
bill that colnclaed with a wave ol
inflation.
From spring through fall of this
year Ihe Federal Reserve system
turned the credit screw down tight
er and tlgntcr with successive
hikes in the discount rale the
interest rate at which it lends to
member banks to help them lend
to their customers. But in recent
weeks it has shifted to a more open
handed policy, by supplying funds
to commercial banks through pur
chases In the open market of gov
ernmenl securities. This has tend
ed in part to nullify the rate boosts
by creating new bank reserves.
This new supply of fun'ds coincid
ed witn tnc yearly octoocr peak
of business borrowing. The board
thus acted to keep Its otherw Ise re
strictive policies from drying up
credit supplies at the time of
greatest demand.
At least partly as a result, the
interest rate on 91-day Treasury
bills dropped yesterday tor the
second successive week. The rate
on these bills sets the pattern for
all Interest rates. It had hit a 28
month high Oct. 18.
. - . I
mm
Enter Today at your
Police Inspector Reports
Change In Widow's Story
NEW TORK Mrs. Ann Wood
ward says it was a noise rather
than anything she saw that prompt
ed her to fire the shotgun blast
that killed her wealthy sportsman
husband. William Woodward Jr.
Propped up in a hospital bed, the
attractive blonds widow last night
gave authorities details of events
leading to the shooting ot her hus
band early Sunday. She broke down
when she came to the actual
shooting. Nassau County Dist. Atty.
Frank Oulolta said, and the ques
tioning was discontinued for the
night. .
Police Give
Windy City
Murder Lead
CHICAGO (UP) Chicago po
licemen Journeyed far into North
ern Wisconsin today to question
two "strange acting" men about
the sa'dlstic murder of three young
boys.
The men were arrested Monday
night .'u an abandoned farm house
four miles north ot Ladysmlth.
Wis. They were identified as
Charles Driscoll, 19, and Ed Kline,
30, both of Chicago.
Sheriff Peter Sybors said the
men had been living In the 'aban
doned house, even though it con
tained nothing but a bed, one
blanket, and a stove.
T.ie men "acted strangely" when
Sybers awoke them and put them
under arrest, the sheriff said. They
did not ask why they were being
picked up for questioning at the
request of Chicago police, he re
ported. Chicago detectives John Blckler
and Art Kelly set out on a 400-mile
all-night drive to Ladysmlth to
question the two men. Sybers said
he would not grill the prisoners un
til the Chicago officers arrived.
The Wisconsin arrests were the
latest development hi the baffling
manhunt for the killers of Robert
Peterson, 13, John Schuessler, 13,
and his 11-year-old brother, Anton.
The boys were strangled or beat
en to death on Chicago's northwest
side on Oct. 18. Their nude, mu
tilated bodies were found stacked
In a forest preserve ditch.
Chicago police asked for the ar
rest of Driscoll and Kline when
they learned from a tipster that
Driscoll had given up his factors
job and left town on Oct. 20, two
days after the bodies were dis
covered, i
Further Investigation showed
that Driscoll and Kline were to
gether the night of the murder.
police said. Officers said the two
men also frequented riding stables
in the area and were well acquaint
ed with Robinson's wood?, where
the bodies were found.
Driscoll told friends in Chicago
he was "going to blow town and
head for Florida for the winter."
police said. Instead, he and Kline
drove to Lady3mith in Kline's 1947
Oldsmobilc.
Eye witnessss have reported
thev saw a battered car of similar
vintage in the area where the
bovs' bodies were found.
Driscoll told Sybers he came to
Ladysmlth to visit with his grand
mother. The two men had worked
for a Ladysmlth farmer for
"several days," they said, and
then moved into the vacant house.
Hammond Organ
Chord Organ
Largtftt stork (pad
inn make piano. In
this part ot th
weiL Rrnt a Spinet
olano. Rental pur
cause plan.
LOUIS H MANN PIANO CO.
120 Na. 7th
DODGE DEALERS
On the day of the shooting, po
lice reported the sobbing and hys
terical woman had told them she
fired at a figure or shadow, be
lieving it to be a prowler and not
recognizing; It as her husband.
Inspector Stuyvesant P 1 n n e 1 1,
chief of Nassau County detectives,
said the new information that the
shot was prompted by a noise was
the "major discrepancy" between
her original account and her later
story.
However, Pinnell bad said earlier
her original story was virtually
"useless" because of her highly
disturbed state at the time.
When police arrived at the 15
room woodward home on a 60-acre
Long Island estate, the sobbing
and incoherent Mrs. Woodward
was clutching In her arms the un
clad and bloody body ot her hus
band. Investigators said she was quick
ly given a sedative and some
hours later was wakened by an
injection of a stimulant so police
could question ber.
Mrs. Woodward, a former model
and show girl who married her
socialite husband 12 years ago, Is
still listed as 32 years old by In
vestigators. However school rec
ords and relatives in her home
town of Pittsburg, Kans., indicate
she is about 39.
Her millionaire husband was 35.
Tall, quiet and reserved, he was a
member of one ot New York's
most blue-blooded families and the
?wner of the famed racehorse
Nashua.
- Just an hour or so before the
shooting the Woodwards had re
turned from a party given for tho
Duchess ot Windsor at an estate
near their own weekend home at
Oyster Bay on Long Island's fash
ionable North Shore.
Plnnoll said the Investigation
would include questioning of other
party guests and of Woodward's
mother, who might shed light on
the relations between her daughter-in-law
and son.
Oulotta said the marital back
ground nf the Woodwards was one
of the aspects of the case that still
needed investigation.
There were newspaper reports
the marriage had been a stormy
one, with separations and threat
ened divorce. There were also re
ports that both had employed pri
vate detectives to keep an eye on
each other, but neither turned out
to be Involved with other men or
women.
ra Aim sc
...and cauliflower is just one of
the inviting fresh fruits and vegetables
featured this week in the
BrodueeBirade
Q AH your money back on apyitem that doesn't please yoaj
1 y-0hi
ELMO YOUNG, lonctime rei.
ident of Klamath, and Siski
you counties celebrated his
70th birthday in Klamath
Falls on October 26. Young,
a bachelor, was in town from
Tulelake. He worked for
many years for the Haskins
family of Merrill and the late
Raymond Taylor in Barnes Val
ley. He lives alone with his
18-year-old horse Tony, and
his eight year old dog, Boun
cer, While here he was a
guest of Mr. and Mrs. Ray
mond Baldwin.
BAD CHECK TRIAL
SEOUL. Korea (UP) American
businessman Fred- Higgins, tried
and acquitted b a Korean court
last year on smuggling charges,
faced trial again today on charges
of issuing bad checks.
Higgins, the first American tried
in a Korean court, was formally
indicted Monday for allegedly
passing S4100 in bad checks. Trial
date lor Higgins, 27, Vinia, Okla.,
has not beeu set.
TAP ACROBATIC
NOVELTY HAWAIIAN
BALLET
ALL AGES - EVENING HOURS $6.00 PER MONTH
SANDRA RM PEMBERTON
615 UPHAM Phont 2-0384
Membtr NADAA
National Assoc. Dance Affiliated Artist Inc.
111 w
C7
i
i
select thy?Uldruknwhow to
Sit leSt cauliflweri the field?
Safeway buyers do. ThevToSff
snowy, compact heads with i
noting fuJlfliPs
Pnce it per pound at only t
- IT- M .. .r t r Si r. " ... I
TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 1. 1855
Cool Weather
Prevails
B THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Generally cool weather prevailed
In most parts of the country Tues
day. .
The fresh mass of cool air which
moved into the Northern Rockies
Monday spread eastward and
southward over the Northern and
Central Plains, Central Rockies
and the Upper Mississippi Valley.
Temperatures fell 10 to 20 de
gress in the cool belt, with read
ings Tuesday morning In the :os
and 30s. Ahead of the leading edge
of chilly temperatures ranged from
the 40s over the Oreat Lakes re
gion to the 70s southward to Teus.
Readings were in the 30s and
40s in areas east of the coolest
weather with 60s in Southern Flor.
Ida. They were In the 40s and (0s
west of the Continental Divide and
in the 30s In the Great Basin re
gion. Snow flurries were reported east,
ward through the Northern Rock,
les, Northern Plains and Upper
Mississippi Valley, Light showers
fell in' Washington and Oregon
while rain diminished in most of
the Northeast, with light falls can
turning In Maine, Mew Hampshire
and Vermont.
Oh-h-h!
Those '56 ,
OLDSMOBILESr
Coming
NOVEMBER 3
DICK B. MILLER CO.
7th and Klamath
lC