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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (July 2, 1959)
PAGE 2 A HERALD AD NEWS, Klamath Falls. Ore. Thursday, Julv 2. 1959 California Weather 1 I'nllcd press International San Francisco Bay Area: Fair through Saturday except high foe near coast; high today San Fran cisco 64, Oakland 71, San Mateo 74, San Rafael 80; low tonight 51 56; westerly winds 15-30 m.p.h. af ternoons and evenings. Mt! Shasta-Siskiyou area: Part ly cloudy toduy, then fair through Saturday; cooler today and to night. Sierra Nevada: Fair through Sat urday except possibility of a few Bfiernoon and evening thunder slorins south portion: slightly cool er In north today and tonight. Actor 'No Show' For Judo Match HOLLYWOOD, Calif. (AP - Lawyer Arthur Crowley waited, but television star Wayde Pres ton didn't show up Wednesday night for a judo match. Crowley commented. "The whole thing was very foolish any way." , He said they were to have met at his office. Crowley said previously the .Japanese - style encounter was agreed to Sunday night during an argument at a party. He said they bet JI.Ooo on the outcome. Ends Tonite "I Want To LW" "d "The Defiant Onei" &J!f -fj THOUSANDS I NOW THE UNCHAINED Tir4'J K MILLIONS! ft t J EMERGES FROM 7A THE RAGING X H ,7 T Vh RIOTS AND Wti 7 v SJ jf&gVi REVELS OF 10,000 , 1 Ifl YEARS AGO I iS V 0 1, I I,x. w JkLj STEVE Sylva IgmnnaVmria Fibrnw Mioni Ivo Girr'ani -Arturo Dommici DCCUCC K0SCINA CANALE Mimmo Patmara-bdia Alfonsi-GmaRovere IlLLIUOT o-ic'iotPiETROFRNCisci-o5cir'iM.iiLifo.Ml,ftoi. Warner Bros $ 49. 3hff'eThA WirUoHoct Fuant On THa Big-Time Big -Thrill Rodeo Circuit! BORN RECKLESS .m TF Will lMS wtittt. miit(,.4K.tr,oouP r-twMN WAfiHFR BROS V pfS im iiS r- rra OPENS 6:45 NOW SHOWING! JOHN WILLIAM ...RIDE WHERE ONLY THE GREAT 2t ONES GO! . WftVHE HE ..fv All' k ' JOHN FfJRnS THUNDERING SPECTACLE L The Horse Soldiers CONSTANCE TOWERS JOHN FORD iiHt gibson JOHN LEE MAHIN - MARTIN RACKIN COLON by DLux ficttifif Near ftlkutnt O -) 1 Mahk4 T'ire fter oirtf t libl 0"UA ftr4i Al Vah LmiI Omim FIGHT FILMS! L : II 1 missjoUJ orticiAi worios hiavywugmt championship ught fimsi "DENNIS THE MENACE" I OONt CALL RHUSARS PIE STRATFORD, Ont. P) Queen Elizabeth II looks today at history, a renowned Shakespear ean festival and possibly the aft ermath of a comic opera Indian independence movement. The royal lour, now in lis third week, is taking the Queen and Prince Philip through a region of southwest Ontario .where the ech os of the War of 1RI2 between the United States and Britain still resound. In anticipation of the royal visit, flags were flying at a farm house known as "Battlefield House," on Stoncy Creek near Hamilton. LMD- Liz Ganders At History, Renowned Bard Festival Parents Told To Stay Home TOKYO (AP)-A U.S. Air Force colonel is urging parents in his command to stay home and take care of their children. Col. Charles W. Johnstone, of Sacramento, Calif., commander of the 60noih Support U(ing, said he is deeply concerned with some parents' shirking of moral re sponsibilities for child guidance, child training and child discipline. A large number of children have been for all practical pur poses deserted by their parents," he stated in the wing's weekly newspaper. "There have been many ser ions incidents involving American children which can be traced di rectly to a lack of parental con trol. Almost invariably, the pa rents of the children were not al home at the time of the incident." Johnstone did not elaborate but, there have been roports o juvenile delinquency by American kids. Last April, five youths were sent back to the United States after an IB-year old Japanese girl said she was raped by nine Americans. "No maid however competent can be expected to properly con trol and discipline her employers' children, Johnstone said. "No maid should be expected to ac cept this responsibility." The battle of Stoney Creek, not the most glorious passage of American military history, saw some 800 British regulars attack under cover of night and rout four times that many Americans. Historians say the skirmish vital ly affected the course of the war. An Indian uprising took place last spring near Brantford, anoth er stopping point for the royal couple. A group of hereditary chiefs from the six Iroquois nations challenged the authority of the elected governing body on their reservation. They took possess- sion of the town hall for several days until the mounted police re stored the elected council. One of the rebel leaders was Chief Wallace (Mad Bear) Ander son of Lewiston, N.Y. A report cir culated Wednesday night that some of the dissidents would try to present Elizabeth a petition demanding independence within the commonwealth. After short visits to a number of small towns en route, the royal couple was to ride through Shake speare Street in Stratford and at tend Canada's celebrated Shake spearean festival. . Since its start six years ago, the festival has become-one of Canada's foremost theatrical events. Liberace Wife Asks Divorce RIVERSIDE, CaliL (AP)-"We just live different lives." George Liberace's wife said after suing for divorce Wednesday. She told reporters that George violin-playing brother of pianist Liberace "is away so much of the time. I tried to keep up with him, but it was impossible. My health suffered. Mrs. Jayne Shields Liberace's complaint charged mental cruel ty. Its only specific allegation: "He comes in late and frightens afliant." She asked $1,135 monthly tem porary alimony and said the vio linist earned $60,000 last year. A hearing on her alimony request will be held July 17. MnSjG--ZTODAY!Z: auQ OPEN DAILY 7:00 P. Mj ,m .11 v,. miu,,!. ii m "UI III tVUIIII.ll JIIM V PATTY McCORMACK MARY ERLING FICKETT '.'ZTu'H Plus! ACTION CO-HIT! 1 V ft A CD CiNtMioHlr.cCOliOR m. MM MIHdNrV.nil RFDT DDI lun ivvit mnnviibi uitvvuii nwutllV j UNUA IKIalAL (DIMM NAM low mm j SHOWN AT 10:15 ONLY f. SATURDAY FIRST I Hot f 40 ONLY! RUN! :vr lfor Com to tht Stmn at Popular Motion Pktv.ro tnitrtolnmontl HOM W Russian Jet Airliners Popular Mode Of Travel By VERN HALGLAND MOSCOW (AP Every seat in the big TU104 jet is filled. Some of the smaller, propeller-driven planes of the "oviet Aeroflot fly half empty, but the new jets are popular for crossing the Soviet Union's vast distances. As soon as the plane is aloft the two hostesses bring candies around. Pleasant faced, attrac tively uniformed and speaking I.nglish, the attendants shortly Nurse Chief Surprised An announcement by Portland hospitals that there will be an in crease in the salaries of licensed professional nurses, before nego tiations between the Oregon Asso ciation of Hospitals and the Oregon Nurses Association had been con cluded, evoked surprise by the president of the Oregon Nurses Association. Mrs. Evelyn Conner, R.N.. said that the association has been try ing since March 6 to agree upon employment conditions in addition to salary increases. Before, agree ments have been reached between the two organizations before public announcements were made. Bath groups have been invited to a meeting to try to reconcile their differences. Mrs. Conner said, "There is al ready an acute shortage of pro fessional nurses in Oregon. . . . This is of grave importance to the general public. Nurses have nev er been given adequate recognition in return for their educational service they render." She brought to light that un skilled workers In a mattress fac tory receive $1.89, while nurses receive $1.73. "For this reason, all registered nurses in Oregon are concerned and alarmed over the attitude of the Oregon Hospi tal Association in refusing. to con sider their modest proposals and bypassing the nurses association, Mrs. Conner concluded. Crews Seek 2 Brothers LAKEPORT (UPI) Emergen cy workmen and divers were searching Wednesday night for the bodies of two brothers who were drowned when their auto over turned into Blue Lake, 16 miles north of here. Kenneth Daugherly,-28, and his brother Harold, .. 25, of Capella, were the victims. The accident oc curred about 7:30 p.m. Wednesday on Highway 20 when the Daugh erty auto blew a tire on a turn and tumbled down a SO-foot em bankment into 40 feet of water. Two passengers, Victor Reardon, 18, and Franklin D. Brodie, 22. escaped from the sinking auto and swam to safety. Site pf the crash was approx imately one-half mile east' of Le Trianom resort. A portable gener ator and lighting unit from the Lakeport fire department was sent to the scene where divers were searching for the brothers. serve a well prepared hot meal. Alter a couple of hours of smooth, uneventful flying, the plane lands 1,000 miles deeper into the Soviet Union. To an American who spent a month in Moscow three years ago and returned for a 17-day Soviet visit this summer, the improve ment in Soviet air service is strik ing. True, a flight aboard the old DC3-type Uyushin transports used in large quantities on many routes snows that Aeroflot still operates service without stewardesses, without food, without seat belts, even without clean lavatories. American aviation experts say the TU104 is inferior to the U.S. Boeing 707 jet in performance and economy. But the Soviets quickly point out that the TU104 went into service several years ahead of its competitors. The same American experts declare the new Soviet IL18 prop-jet is superior to any thing the United States has in the field of jet-and-propeller combina tion. Aeroflot folders advertise, in conjunction with British-European Airways, a London-Moscow fare of 885 rubles. At the 10to-l rate of exchange for tourists that is $88.50. The coach or tourist class fore is $73.90. . Flight times by TU104 from Moscow, as advertised, include 2 hours 20 minutes to Copenhagen, 3 hours and 45 minutes to Paris. 7 hours 5 minutes to Cairo, 7 hours and 55 minutes to Delhi, 10'4 hours to Peiping and 11 hours 20 min utes to Pyongyang, North Korea. Berths are available on longer flights, at an additional fee. The Soviet Union, aware of the value of the dollar, expects to play host to 15.000 Western tour istsmost of them Americans this year. The 1958 total of U.S. visitors was about 6,000; 1957, 2.500. The big drawing card: Western curiosity about this huge country, long closed to visitors. As yef, however, only 22 cities are on the official itinerary of Intourist, the government travel agency with which every tourist deals. The tourist lands at the air ports of other cities on Aeroflot's system without eettine a oh (0 visit the cities themselves. Ex cept for a stay in Irkutsk. In- tourist provides no lours in Siberia. The Intourist travel rate for in dividual visitors is $30 a day. This "deluxe rate" covers lodging, meals, transportation within the U.S.S.R. and services of a guide- interpreter. For croUDS of 15 persons on more a "first class" rate of $17 a day is available. Also for groups of 15 or more there is a "Tourist A" rate of $12 a day, calling for two persons to a room with pri vate bath and standard meals, and a $IO-a-day "Tourist B" rale lor more austere accommodations with three or four persons to a room' and no private bath. The deluxe tourist gets a book let of four meal coupons for each day of his visit. The waiter totals: up the meal check of each custo mer, and when the total exceeds the value of the coupon as is us ually the case the customer pays the extra cost with rubles. Most Western tourists find In tourist an indispensable aid to travel in the Soviet Union. The guide-interpreters, usually men or women in their 20s, for the most part are intelligent, hard-working and agreeable. But the Soviet Union is not yet geared to accommodate large numbers of tourists. In practice the deluxe traveler usually gets hotel accommodations that in oth er countries would be considered no belter than second or third, class. There is simply nothing bet- ter available. H has become possible to tour! parts of the U.S.S.R. by private automobile. Mr. and Mrs. Eman uel Carton of Baltimore, who made such a tour in May and June, recommend against It for the average traveler. "The Russians just aren't gear ed yet for tourist traffic," says Carton, an attorney. In Tula, a city of 250.000 south of Moscow, the Cartons strayed from the route foreign automo biles are required to take. "Now I know why the Russians don't want foreigners to get off their marked routes," Mrs. Car ton says. "We have some poor sections in our American cities, but never have we seen poverty and human misery like that wt found in Tula. . "Everywhere we found the peo ple ery friendly, and curioui about us and our car." At many stops the Soviet peas ants unscrewed and removed parts of their automobile, but the Cartons attributed this primarily to curiosity.' In Moscow Soviets carefully secure their automobiles at night by padlocking the steer ing wheel to the tilted-forward front seals. Thurs. & Sat. ARCH THEATRE Bly Grand Opening FRIDAY Klamath Falls Only EAT-RITE NATURAL FOOD CENTER and CAFE You're Invited to Sample . . . See How Good Foods That Are Good For You Can Be !! 2227 So. Sixth St. Next to Slenderite Salon Dentures Prove Man's Identity SAVANNAH, Ga. (AP)-If you have a GI dental plate, it may come in handy for something be M'de schewing. One did for a man at the Citizens and Southern Na tional Bank. Teller Mary Neatherly asked him for identification when he presented a government check for cashing. He took out his dental plate and pointed to its GI number, which corresponded to the number on the check. The check was cashed. WOMAN KILLED MULESHOE, Tex. (AP) - A west Texas woman 'died Wednes day when her car ran over her. Airs. M. D. Gaddy, about 55, had stopped at her rural mail box. The car was left running and officers say the transmission ap parently slipped into reverse. She was knocked down and run over twice, the car circling twice before coming to a halt. Klimath Falti, Ortfon Serving Southern Oregon and Northern California Publiihed daily except Saturday by Southern Oregon Publishing Company 1 Main at Esplanade Phone TUxedo 4-fllll FRANK JENKINS. Editar BILL JENKINS, Managing Editor FLOYD WYNNE. City Editor j Entered aa aecond claaa matter at the! pott office at Klamath Falls, Oregon, ' on August 30. 1000. under art nf Congreu. March 3, 179. Secondc1au pottage paid at Klamath Falls. Oregon, and at additional mailing offices. i SUBSCRIPTION RATES I Carrier 1 Month . S 1 M Months S on 1 Year Mail In Advance 1 Month . 1 SO j Montha , -L. S90 1 Year 118 00 Carrier and Dealers Week days, copy e Sundays, copy .. . . . 10c UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATED PRESS AltDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION ' Subscribers not receiving delivery of their Herald and News, please phone TUxedo 4-1111 before T PM, After T P.M.. phone Maurice Miller, Or eulauoa Manager at TVxede -47U. BON BAZAAR'S BIG FRIDAY SALE! On Sale Friday Only! Unhtard of Value! Hun drtds of items net listed htre. Leek for the Friday Surprise Salt Tags! I J! Exceptional Values to 24.95 LBQI6S UFCSSGS Summer Cottons 77? Ladies Cotton Gloves si! Odds and Ends Wonder- 77? Ladies Lingerie One Group 77? Infants Waterproof Dress Panties ??? Boys or Girls T Shirts ' ??? 77? Reg. 225 3 Flashlight Batteries Ladies Sun Hatsrar ??? Aspirin Bottles of 100 77? Barbecue Tools Chrome Plated 777 Van Camps Pork and Beans n 300 .' ??? I LOW, LOW PRICES PLUS S&H GREEN STAMPS 1l 4480 So. 6lh 0) 61) 61) TO ilk AM Next-to Oregon Food