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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 10, 1955)
PAGE TWO HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 1 1955 XfLW-CBS ABC. 1451 KO Thursday Evening, Nov. 10 6 00 Today'l Sporli Hlffhliihta 6:19 Lowell Thomai CBS 0:30 Amos 'N' Andy Music Hall CBS 6,33 fJBWI LOB 7:00 Godfrey D licit CBS 7:30 Record Derby n (K) Newt CBS 8.03 Tenneaaea Emit CBS 8:1(0 Grange Program . 8:43 Bing Croaby CBS , 0:00 Sound Mirror ABC ' . i 9:30 Orchestra CBS 30:00 10 PM Edition Newt 10:13 Johnny Dollar CBS 10;:to Tim for Relaxation - . 11:00 Sign Off Mewi bummiry . Friday, Nov. 11 , . 6:00 Minute Newi Summary 6:01 America' Kavorite Muaie -- C:1S Minute Newa Summary ;18 America'! Kavonle Muaie 6:30 Minute News. Summary 6:31 America's Favorite Music 6:49 Minute News Summary fi:4ti Amerca's Favorite Muile ' 7:00 News Breakfast EditlO 7:15 Dufan and Mel Show 7:30 Frank Cos CBS 7:45 Harry Babbitt CBS 8,00 Breakfast Club ABC U;00 Blue Skies 0:13 Better Living :30 Helen Trent CBS S:4S Our Gal Sunday CBS 10:00 Wendy Warren CBS 10:19 Ma Perkina CBS 10:30 Young Dr. Melon CBS 10:45 Guiding Light CBS 11:00 Stop 'N' Snop 11:16 Perry Mason CBS ' 11:30 Nora Drake CBS 11:45 Aunt Mary CBS 12:00 Noon Edition New 12:15 Payleas Sidewalk Show J2:M House Party CBS 1:00 Arthur Godfrey CBS 2:30 Hank Henry Show 3:00 Second Mrs. Burton CBS 3:15 Miller's Matinee 3:25 Stop 'N S top 3:30 Ruth Ashl3n CBS 3:40 Music .1:45 Ted Malone ABC 4:00 Whispering Streets ABC 4:20 Basin Briefs 4:30 Today's Top Tunes 5:00 Edward R. Murrow CBS fl:15 Bill Stern ABC 5:30 Easy Listening 5:40 Weather Roundup 8:43 Frank Gobs CBS 5:35 Hometown Newa fi:00 Today's Sports Highlights 6:15 Lowell Thomas CBS 6:30 Amot 'N' Andy Musle Hall CBS 6:55 Chevrolet News CBS 7:00 21st Precinct CBS 7:30 Newa CBS 7:35 Jack Carson CBS SOS Tennessee Em la CBS 8 30 Gueit Star ! 8:45 Bing Crosby HJM Boundmuror ABC 9:30 Address by A dial E- Stevtnw ABC 0:55 News ABC 10:00 10 PM Edition . 10:19 Johnny Dollar CBS 10:30 Time for Re'sxalion 11:00 Sign Off News Summary 11:03 Sign Off ' KFJI MBS DLBS, 1159 KG Thursday , Evening , Not. 10 6.00 Bob Greene Newi DLBS 6: 13 World of Sports UliS Hollywood Highlights :30 Local Evening Newa 6:43 Sam Hayes DLBS . 6 33 Harry Wlimer DLBS 7 00 Official Detective DLBS 7:30 Crime Fighter DLBS 6:00 Rob and Ray DLBS 6 30 Wheel of Chance DLBS 0 00 Gabriel Htatter MBS B:15 Fulton Lewis Jr. MBS 9:30 Coke Time With Eddie Fiiher DLBS o 43 Jl Jamboree 12:00 Sign Off Friday, Nov. 11 6:00 Sunrise Serenade and Late Newa 6::jo Sons if the Pioneers 6:43 Farm Reporter 7:00 Hemingway MBS 7:15 Breakfast Gang DLBS 7:30 Today's Best Buys 7:45 Local Morning Newa 6:00 Cliff Engle DLBS 6:15 Morning Melodies 9:49 Basin Bouquet 10:00 Newspaper of the Air DLBS 10:19 Tello Test DLBS 10:30 Viilt to Dons 10 35 Quickie Quit 10:45 Visit to LPolntrs 11:00 Sam Hayes MBS 11:03 Musical Manor 11:30 Queen for a Day DLBS 12:00 TlDi from Town Shoo 12:15 Noon News x 12:30 Beat On Record 12:45 Town & Country Time 1:00 Western Roundup 1:43 Matinee Melodies 3:29 Five Star Newscast MBS" 3:30 Behind the Story DLBS .1:43 Tello Test DLBS 4:00 Keyboard Kapers 4:13 Hemingway MBS ' 4:30 Here's the Answer DLBS 4:49 Sam Hayes DLBS 3:00 Timber Tales 5:03 Traffic Jam 5:93 Newscait MBS 6:00 Bob Greene DLBS 6:13 World of Sports 6:23 Hollywood Highlights 6:30 Local Eve, News 6:45 Sam Hayes DLBS 6:33 Harry Wlimer DLBS 7:00 United Fund Broadcast 7:30 Bob and Ray DLBS 10 BOO Army Hour DLBS ' t:'J0 Counterspy DLBS 9:00 Gabriel Heatter DLBS 8:13 Fulton Lewis Jr. DLBS 9:30 JI Jamboree 11:00 Sign Off KBES TV Channel I CBS, NBC, ABO Thursday Evening, Nov. 12:00 High Noon , 1:00 Music Hall l:l.j Secret Storm 1:30 World of Mr. Sweeney fr 1:43 Val Rogue 2:00 Pinky Lee 2:30 Howdy Doody 3:00 Feminine Fancies .1:30 Matinee 4:43 TBA 5:00 Uncle Bill Show 5:30 Let's See the World 6:00 Ore-Cal Panorama 7:00 Sherlock Holmes 7:30 Star and the Story , 6:00 Groucho 8:30 Guy Lomhardo 9:00 All Star Theatre 6:30 Ford Theatre 10:00 Favorite Story 10:30 Damon Runyan 11:00 Big Picture 11:30 Midget Movies 12:oo Newa , 12:05 Sign Off ' Friday, Nov. 11 12 00 High Noon 1:00 Music Hall 1:15 Srcret Storm 1:30 World of Mr. Sweeney 1:45 Arts 6c Crafts 2:00 Pinky Lee 2:30 Howdy Doody 3:00 Feminine Fancies 3:30 Matinee 4:43 TBA 3 00 Aunt Polly's Birthday Party 3::iO Wild BiU Hickok 6:00 TBA 9:30 General Sportstime 6:45 Warmup Time ' 7 m Pavalrarl tit Soorta i' 7:45 Frank LeJriy's Football Forecast g.OO Life of Riley -8:30 Hollywood Album ! 4S Medical History :30 News 9:00 Waterfront 9 30 Pal Club 9:43 Talent Time 10:00 T ie Line UD 10:30 Weather 10:3a Premiere Theater 11:33 News 11:40 Sign, Off "DENNIS THE MENACE" - STUMP TO STAY MANILA 0P Adm. Felix B. Slump, U.S. Pacific Fleet com mander, arrived Wednesday lor a three-day stay on his tour of Navy Installations in the Far East. , KIRKPATRICK'S EAST SIDE APPLIANCES ' Announces Exciting News About 4 MODELS TO CHOOSE FROM ALL BY GENERAL ELECTRIC ... We've Got Just The Dryer To Fit Your Needs - And Pocket Book At 1 4 LOW PRICES 1956 Economy Model DBYER Buy On Easy Ttrmt ' G. E. Buy of (he Year-1956 DRYER Hi-Lo Temp Control Sf95 G. E.'t Completely Deluxe mum Hi-Lo Heat Control FLUFF 4 SPRINKLE POSITION 95 HERE IT IS! NEW G.E. DRYER Automatic Clothes Conditioning. Air Freshener Automatic Sprinkler Automatic Control 22T Buy On Eosy Terms r N e ( WE GIVE GREEN STAMPS p KIRKPATRICK'S sMsl Appliances Your Authorized General Electric Dealer 7th & Klamath Phone 8886 ' Eisenhower Plans To Leave On Schedule 'I GWMQEP MY MIND. I THINK I'LL EAT MY DESSERT.' Eisenhower turns Attention To Mid-East War Settlement WASHINGTON im President Ei senhower has focused the United States search for Middle Eastern peace once more on economic aid and a military willingness to guar antee security. At the same time, he emphasized yesterday that while the United States will continue to consider re quests for arms for self defense, it will not "contribute to an arms competition in the Near East." Taking a personal hand In. Amer ican efforts to end . Arab-Israeli friction, the President issued a statement at penver renewing his endorsement of "the economic and security contributions which this country was prepared to make," as outlined by Secretary of State Dulles last Aug. 26. In a New York speech, Dulles proposed then: 1. Loans to compensate refu gees, develop water resources and YEAR-ROUND GIFT! -. ,"T C II ' A 11 vVi. rnH 3'i I'ruK UULL n n , 'all 9020 Your lit tic girl will love to dress her favorite doll in Jhese ador able outfits! Mnkc her happy nil year long sew this wardrobe for n special Christmas glfll Blouse, Jumper, long-torso dress, hat, full lens th or short ie cape, panties and bouffant petticoat! I Pattern DMO: For dolls 14, 16. I 18. 20, inches tall. Use gay I scraps sea patterns for yardages. This easy-to-urc pattern gives t perfect fit. Complete illustrated ! Sew Chart show s you every step. Send thirty-five cents in coins I for this pattern add i cents for i each pattern for lst-class mail I ing. Send to Marian Martin, care ot Herald and News, Pattern Dept., 2;)2 West 13(h St., New York 11, N Y. Print plainly name, address with lone, sl.c and style number Scottish Rite Plans Reunion The Klamath Scottish Rile reun Ion will be held Friday evening at 8 o'clock in the new Scottish Rite Temple on Wnlmtt Street be tween Sixth and Seventh. The largest class of Initiates ever to take tne degree locally will be inducted. The candidates will be knoivn as the dedication class In honor of the now Temple and will consist ol men from Klamath County and Tulrlake. The fourth degree will be con frrred at the reunion by Ernest MrBeth. Ray Owens. Hans Norland. Arthur Stites. Al Angel and Lortn Campbell. Snturday at 8 D m. the 14th de gree will be conferred in full form and the following week the 15th. 18th. 30th and 3.'nd degrees will be conferred ending with the dedi cation on Sunday, November 20. tap ni. The public Is Invited to the ocdl cation serwecs. Irrigate arid lands in the Middle East. 2. U.S. participation in formal treaty commitments to guarantee the embattled borders between Is rael and her Arab neighbors, If the two sides agree on a perma nent peace. Those points also got simultan eous attention overseas. In Geneva Dulles and British Foreign Secre tary Harold Macmillan considered the possibility of raising money to help Egypt harness the waters of the River Nile. Egypt already has pending be fore the World Bank a request for a loan for a high dam at Aswan. In London, Prime Minister An thony Eden echoed Dulles' August offer to guarantee the frontiers once the Iraelis and Arab states agree to a permanent peace. Eden accused Russia of creating additional danger in the Middle East by shipment of arms and said "it Is fantastic to pretend that this deliberate act of policy was an innocent commercial transaction." The Russian radio has made that statement with reference to Czechoslovakia's shipment of arms to Egypt, and Russia's Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov Is reported to have made a similar reply to Dulles' protest about the move. Eisenhower's statement made no direct mention of the arms ship ments,, but after referring to U.S. aod U.N. efforts to promote peace and "minimize violence In the area," he said with obvious refer ence to Russia: . "I hope that other nations of the world will cooperate in this endeaver, thereby contributing significantly to world peace." The United States, Britain and France agreed in a joint declara tion in 1950 to work to prevent an arms race and any forcible change of borders in the Middle East. POORS OPEN 6:30 P.M. BP NOW PLAYING. THE EXCITING TRUE LIFE STORY OF ' AUDIE MURPHY AMERICA'S MOST DECORATED HEROI ffil HE By MARVIN L. ABBOWSMITH DENVER Wi Today is Presi dent Elsenhower's 481h and last full day In Fitzsimons Army Hos pital. Tomorrow it's off to Wash Ineton and a Joyous "welcome home" reception. The mood at the hospital on this final day among the doctors, nurses and all the others who have cared for the 65-year-old Presi dent is a Joyous one, too. They are all delighted and so relieved that his damaged heart is mend ing well. Eisenhower undoubtedly is hap piest-of all. although bis - wife is feeling mighty good about the way things are going. With, check-out time Just a day off. the P r e s 1 d e n t's business agenda was being kept light to assure as much last minute rest as possible. He had no official gov ernment visitors scheduled today except for his chief aide, Sher man Adams. , Departure from the hospital Is fixed for about 8:30 a.m. MST to morrow and 30 minutes later he will take off for Washington aboard his private plane, Columbine III. His doctors agree that the Presi dent could have left the hospital a few days ago if he had been willing to be .carried aboard the plane. But he insisted that when he did leave he was going to be able to walk up the 19-step ramp. Now he is abje to do that. Yester day he walked up and down a 20 step flight of stairs at the hospital a half dozen times. In going up the ramp to his plane at Lowry Air Force Base here, Eisenhower will pause on about the seventh step at a mic rophone in place there and ad dress the nation briefly on televi sion and radio. He probably will express thanks for the prayers for his recovery and for the tens of thousands of "get well" messages he has received. He also plans another brief in formal talk on arrival at the Wash ington airport. There will be a "welcome home" reception there and greetings from crowds along the route from the airport to the White House, which Eisenhower left Aug. 14 for a Colorado work and play vacation. He was stricken in Denver Sept. 24. . After a weekend of rest at the White House, the President . will travel on Monday to his farm at Gettysburg, Pa., .for further con valescence. His eagerness to get started East was apparent yesterday as he posed for photographers with Pres ident Carlos Castillo . Armas of Guatemala. Standing in the hospi tal corridor in a biege robe over light yellow pajamas, Eisenhower talked about a "bright and early" departure for Washington tomor row. He did so In chatting with Ed ward T. Folllard, veteran White House reporter for the Washington Post and Times Herald, who rep resented his colleagues at the picture-taking session. Folllard later wrote: TONIGHT 19 PELICAN. SURPRISE NIGHT! DOORS OPEN 6:30 P.M. NOW PLAYING! 'Cinemascope fc una uuu ui win "1 PR II TMt IM HUTU V KNINI TM tlI X. U.HO.OOO Mil k$ ft m TONY JULIE GEORGE CURTIS-ADAMS - NADER F -. OPEN DAILY 5:30 P. H. Shew Start! At Dink On Our Giant Screen! aaaamoiMaK. S ALL NEW THRILL fY. 11 ' a 1 Faith DOMrm ir - i nrk.RiiAU. torn CM lom mw .- "When President Eisenhower rides from the Washington Nation al Airport to the White House . . . Friday afternoon, the thousands who line the streets may notice a change in him. "He Is leaner than, he was be fore his heart attack leaner but sharp. ' j , j 'He is down- now to his 'West Point weight,' which his doctors say is 'excellent.' He weighs 172 pounds,, the same as he: did.. 45 years ago when be was a Cadet. The loss of weight since he en. tered the hospital here isn't much, four or five pounds at the most but it seems to have taken placi where it would be most notlceabli in the region under his chin He 1 Is now less Jowly than he was." But Folllard also reported Eisen. hower "retains his familiar ruddl ness, and . . . his eyes are at blue and keen as ever. He has all his old vivacity and sharpness, too that man-ln-motion aura that hai always characterized him." ' Pelican Doom Open 12:45 Tower Opens 2:15 P.M BIG MATINEE IRIinDM lBlaip ' (CftVM Mart IVV LLLJ FAVORITE pTT 00 li r""3N.avl WOW.' A 3 -Ring Circus of African Thrills and Laughs BBm fill iOH ALL THIS AT OUR REGULAR PRICES! DOORS OPEN 6:30 (?) feV r, A V ; t 1 V7 SHE DREAMED fvJ OF LOVE... fJ :J? and what girl doesn't? But f, . Y3 the way it happened lit jto her... should A V A "s! ppen t0 V ' 7s5 ou" I If "re My Love" ' wn jcV '.X "V. . o nmzmber! cwf YS SR(HNG fromM-G-M ' ?? I ; I iHttitrcmt' I 'A llESUECIl-IILIIlS KEENAN WYNN ESTELLE MOOD EISA LANCHESTER BARRY JONES RLSO- 1 t COLO. T I, ( r ,Cj70FATBR ON WIDH 8CREINI Ijudy garland I ,H0" -'""TOONTIgcl