Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, January 07, 1959, Page 2, Image 2

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    PAGE TWO
HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
WEDNESDAY. JANUARY 7. 1959
The itarfish, to the National
Geographic Society reports, ii not
fish at all. It ii an Echinoder
tnata, phylum.
ODORS CPEN 6;3Q P.
Starts THURSDAY!
Mi J
V j d 4 I
CURT JURGENS
AKIM TAMIROFF
POORS OPEN 6:SO P.M
MflTTlas
groping
puppy love into adult emotion
and a town's "dirty mind
can turn it into a
nightmare of disgrace!
starnnJOHN SAXON 'SANDRA DEE
Cb-stamrtg
LUANA PATTEN MARGARET LINDSAY - VIRGINIA GREY
-tnJODY McCREA-ALAN BAXTER .
TERESA WRIGHT -JAMES WHITMORE
f tJub Feature At 7:00 & 10:15
sc
4
JOCK MAHONEY-KIM
TIM HOVtY GENE EVANS
ion CHtNcr tOMotmt
. UMIS GlEtSON luor
itrmtY stout wr"r
MCRIOITH Mill UPRI uKif!
Shewn At
The white tile walls and ceiling
of the Lincoln Tunnel under the
Hudson River are washed down
every two days.
NICOLE MAUREY
FRANCOISE ROSAV
" Itndt
tonite; .
! TODAY.!
Hum
3
...when one
kiss can turn
HUNTER
8:30 Only
hJ
LM
"DENNIS THE MENACE"
'WAIT A 5FC I WW scwetwin' BACK.''
Whirling Kremlin Dervish
Begins 13-Day U.S. Tour
WASHINGTON (AP) - Anastas
I. Mikoyan, the whirling dervish
of Kremlin diplomacy, left
on a 13-day coast-to-coast tour to
day after two days of probing the
U.S. attitude toward the future of
Germany.
The 63-year-old first deputy pre
mier arranged to head first to
Cleveland for a visit with million
aire industrialist Cyrus Eaton. ,He
is due back in Washington Jan. 19
to talk to President Eisenhower.
A Soviet source in Berlin said
Mikoyan would propose a compro
mise solution of the Berlin dispute
when he sees Eisenhower. The
source gave no details.
In the meantime. Secretary of
State Dulles and other top Airier-
cans collected assurances and hints
the old Bolshevik scattered about
the nation's capital.
It was their impression that Mi
koyan was here, not on vacation,
as he insists, but to plug the line:
Make me an offer.
Although he left a lot of things
fuzzy, they said, he so far has
come up with no genuine Soviet
concession on the tension-packed
Berlin situation. Rather, any
change appeared to be one of tone
instead of substance, leaving the
door open to possible concessions
only after some sort of U.S. coun
ter-proposal.
After conferring for more than
two hours with Vice President Nix
on at the Capitol Tuesday, Miko
yan was asked by newsmen wheth
er the Soviet Union had altered its
Berlin policy in any way.
Why change it he fired back.
'One does not change a good po
sition."
The State Department was re
ported particularly mulling over
two impressions left by the wily
Mikoyan in talks with Dulles, Nix-
congrcssional leaders, indus
trialists, union officials and oth
ers. These were:
1. That the Soviets might favor
format guarantees of access
to Berlin, 110 miles inside East
Germany. But it was not clear
whether this depended upon ac
ceptance of Soviet Premier Nikita
Khrushchev s seeming ultimatum
Khrushchev has demanded that
West Berlin become a "free city
without Western troops by next
May. If that were a condition, any
access guarantee would have lit'
He meaning, since there would be
no Allied troops in West Berlin to
have access to.
1. That Khrushchev's Berlin de
mands were merely to break the
ice so that new East-west talks
possibly only between Eisenhower
and Khrushchev, could grapple
with the whole German question.
This would seem to be a slight
Soviet shift, since Moscow has
been demanding Berlin-only talks
in the face of Western insistence
on treating the German problem
as a whole to include agree-
ment on reunification, European
security and a peace treaty, as
well as Berlin s status.
Booked to travel with Mikovan
today were his 29-year-old son
Sorgo. Soviet Ambassador Mikhail
Mcnshikov, and five aides who ar
rived with Mikoyan from Moscow
Sunday. State Department se
curity agents are assigned to the
pany lor personal protection,
The Mikoyan entourage, goes In
Publication
Scoffs Tale
HAVANA (UPH-Tho rebel pub
lication Revolution scoffed today
at HollVWOOd Star Krrnl Flvnn't
report that he was wounded
wniie operating with Fide Cas
tro."
"That one (Flynnl never saw
Castro." said Vinlptn racalc a
woman broadcaster fnr I he rrh-l
radio, in an article published by
itpvoiuuon.
Flvnn. who said ho had hnn
strated by a government plane
while travelins with a hanH n(
rebel raiders, showed newsmen
here a leg wound which he said
was caused either by a govern
ment millet nr hv a rhin nf 1 1
masnnrv it knocked nff a mllar
oenina wnicn ne had taken cover
BERKSON Fl'NERAL SERVICES
NEW YORK (I'PP - Funeral
services will be held Wcdnesdav
at 10 am. est. for Seymour
Berkson, 53. publisher of the New
York Journal-American, who died
Sunday of heart attack in San
Detroit Thursday, Chicago on Fri
day, San Francisco on Saturday
ana Los Angeles on Sunday and
Monday. It returns East next
Tuesday, going first to New York
and possibly thereafter to Boston
and Philadelphia. ,
After the conference. Mikovan
dodged a direct reply when re
porters wanted to know if he had
invited Nixon to Moscow. He said
instead that he was being well re
ceived here and he was sure the
same courtesies would be shown
American officials who visit Rus
sia.
Mikoyan praised Nixon's Guild
hall speech at London two months
ago, when the vice president
cauea lor economic, not military
competition between the East and
West. Mikoyan said he was for
that, too, and so was Khrushchev.
Mikoyan was a luncheon euest
of James B. Carey, president of
me Apx,-uiu Electrical Workers
Union. Carey said it was his idea
and not an official AFL-CIO func
tion. He said Mikoyan had been
meeting industrialists and he
wanted the .Kremlin chieftain to
confer with some union leaders.
But some members of the AFL-
CIO Executive Board refused to
attend.
Tuesday night, Mikoyan had a
guest to the Embassy for turkey
dinner former disarmament ad
viser Harold E. Stassen, who
stayed five hours. Stassen, now a
Philadelphia lawyer, told report
ers afterward:
"I told the deputy prime min
ister it is my impression both the
United States and Russia need to
make some changes in their for
eign policies to improve the pros
pect of a lasting peace.
Stassen declined to. say whether
Mikoyan agreed with him. He said
he will file a written memo of his
talk with the President and the
State Department.
. New Time Saving CITY OF PORTLAND 1
I Schedule I
1:00 P.M Lv. Portland
I 2:45 P.M lv. The Dalles I
I 4:56 P.M lv. Pendleton
I 7:06 P.M lv. La Grande 1
I 0:05 P.M .Lv. Baker ,
I 3:30 P.M Ar. Denver I
I 6:40 P.M lv. Denver I
. 7:05 A.M Ar. Kansas City .
12:29 P.M Ar. St. Louis
9:00A.M Ar. Chicago I
Secodd Morning .
Clip this schedule save it for reference. 1
L m mm mmm a a aj
Columbia River Drop Set
In Hopes Of Finding Five
PORTLAND (AP) A 50-mile
stretch of the Columbia River will
be dropped up to five feet start
ing tomorrow in hopes of finding
some trace of a missing Portland
family of five.
Beginning at 8 a.m. the pool
behind Bonneville Dam, some 40
miles upriver from Portland, will
be lowered from 73 to 68 feet.
The graduated drop, which will
be completed by 8 a.m. Friday,
will extend up the icy channel to
The Dalles, Ore.
It encompasses Cascade Locks,
Ore. That if the only place Ken
Martin, his wife and three daugh
ters are known to have stopped
Dec, 7 the day they vanished.
A credit card slip, signed by
Martin, shows he purchased gas
oline there tor the family station
wagon.
Martin, 54; his wife, Barbara
Jean, 48: and their three daugh
ters, Barbara, 14; Virginia, 13;
and Sue, 11, were last seen leav
ing home to hunt a Christmas
tree. They told a neighbor they
would return by nightfall.
All along the 50-mile river
stretch, yellow crepe paper marks
spots where a vehicle could most
likely veer out of control into the
swirling water, often hundreds of
feet down a sheer stone cliff.
A caravan of boats will search
(he water, helicopters will check
from the 'air and ground parties
will scour the shoreline.
The boats will carry sonar
equipment to bounce metal-detecting
electronic waves off the river
Commie Guns
Blast Quemoy
TAIPEI (UPD Communist
shore guns hurled saturation bar
rages at the Quemoy outpost is
lands today, reopening the "war
of the Formosa Strait," the Chi
nese Nationalist Defense Ministry
announced.
The ministry said the bombard
ment, threatened in retaliation for
the reported killing of a number
of children by a Nationalist bom
bardment, started at 2 p.m. and
went on for at least two hours.
A communique said that by 4
p.m. the Red batteries had hurled
more than 12.000 shells at the tiny
outpost islands.
Rear Adm. Liu Hoh-tu, the min
istry spokesman, declined com
ment when he was asked whether
he thought the barrage was a
prelude to a Communist invasion
of the islands, except to say that
"the Quemoy garrison is prepared
to meet any emergency.
Wanted!
25 Issues of Nov. 1958
Pageant Magazine
Pay $1.00 Each
Phone 2-3429
on the
Convenient
TUca
bottom. Divers will check metal
objects found.
In addition, the searchers were
asked to watch for a light plane
that vanished Nov. 22 on a flight
through the windy gorge of the
Columbia. It was piloted by Low
ell Adamson of Yakima, Wash.
The water level of the Bonne
ville pool will be dropped at the
rate of about one tenth of a foot
per hour until the level reaches
68 feet, where it will be held until
a.m. Sunday.
About 150,000 cubic feet of wa-
SPECIAL!
One Week
Only!
Here' a
set you'll
be proud
to own!
Always
More for
Your
Furniture
Dollar
at Lucas
Furniture!
A well finished 2-piece set; Mr. and Mrs. Dresser,
bookcase headboard bed with footboard. Chest has
6 drawers and beveled tilting mirror. Headboard
has 2 sliding doors. In light or charcoal.
195 I. Main
Etomelifier Service
EFFECTIVE JANUARY II
it Brasilia
o 'Porttlanet
Connections to Kansas City and St. Louis
Only one night en route from the Pacific Northwest to Dearer
on the Domeliner City of Portland, Convenient connection
with the Domeliner City of St. Louis at Denver means faster
time to Kansas City and St. Louis as well Whether you tntrel
for business or pleasure, the Dome Lounge, the Dome Coach
and the world's only Dome Diner are just a few of the City of
Portland features that will make your trip truly memorable.
Finest and Fastest Train Service East
A. H. CLARK, Dist. Traffic Agent,
Klamath Fells, Ore., OR
Union Pacific R.R., 1107 Ninth St.,
Sacramento, Calif.
ter per aecond will flow from the
dam as the water level is lower
ed, compared to the usual flow
of 125,000 cubic feet per second.
While the water level is raised
Motel
r
COMMODORE HOTEL
Hi Sutt.r ar Jenti
Garage directly acroii the street
Baths and showers in each of our large rooms'
Ideal location for the games or shopping trips
Close to the theaters, smart shops and famous restaurants
DiMr Club-
AAA
Mn yr i-iiNC uuali i t
BEDROOM SETS!
3 '
"VYLainlbWi " by hooker
Double bed, with bookcase headboard, chest, and
'Mr. and Mrs." dresser with 8 drawers
big
and beveled 42x29 .inch plate mirror.
Bowfront styling on chest and dresser with
beautiful heirloom brass pulls; cedar lined storage
drawer in bottom; hardwood; dovetail con
struction drawers are dust proof with center glides;
chemically treated for "Free-Slide" operation.
Mirror-like finish in Sahara Mahogany.
3-Pc. Set; Double Bed, Mr. and $ if tt 95
Mrs. Dresser with Mirror) Chest.
$250 Value!
Pay Only $19 Down
LOW PRICED BEDROOM
Lucas Furniture
again at the rate of about three
tenths of a foot per hour, the w.
ter pouring from the dam will
be cut to 43,000 cubic feet per
second.
CeivinteRM In
dowitewn S FraacIiM
American Exprait Trvl Cire
199
.
Special
$10 A Month!
SPECIAL!
$0095
Ph. 4-3134
Francisco.