Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, July 26, 1959, Page 2, Image 2

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    PAGE 2 A
HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls. Ore.
Sundav, Julv 2fi. 1953
Socialite Heiress Admits Her Kidnap Story Myth
CHICAGO AP A New Jersey
, locialite heiress has admitted her
story of being kidnaped from the
Newark airport by two men.
driven to Chicago and then re
leased because she was "too hot"
to keep was a myth.
Pretty Jacqueline Gay Hart, 21,
broke down Friday under the
gentle questioning of her father.
Ralph A. Hart, executive vice
president of the Colgate Palm
olive Co., and an FBI ajent.
Alter confessing the hoax. Miss
Hart said she did not remember
what had happened since she
vanished from the New Jersey
airport Tuesday night.
The FBI said it .was checking
all phases of Miss Hart s story I
iwhich unfolded after she ap
peared, screaming and crying.
"Help me! help me! beside a
police cruiser in downtown Grant
Park early Friday.
Authorities sent out a broad
cast fUcprihinp th Hi carat dia
mond rini. an amythest ring, a
brooch and a bracelet whicn sne
said tha men stripped Irom her.
At the outset, the FBI and
police were skeptical of the girl's
story of being seized, blindfolded
and gagged, tossed in the tnnneau
of a car under a blanket an
driven by two abductors to
Chicago and then released in the
lakelront park.
Pnlir said Miss Hart s smart
gray twccd dress, white sweater,
"DENNIS THE MENACE"
"Hi ! 'A1EM0EB ME? JW THE LITHE BOY THE REAL ESTATE Guy
TOtO KJU DlDMf LIVE W THIS WSHSXHOOD. 'A1EMSER ?
NOW FLAYING!
NAVY'S
fS GREATEST
DISASTER...?
HUM tKKU
MICKEY SHIUWNtSSr
ROKHT UOOUTMI
1 " Omm Tede 12141
Ends Monday
ff
Jf '-i K iio win tuw
mm sahd smui - chuck iwi
GO.
JAMES STEWART
KIM NOVAK
INAIFRED HITCHCDCIC5
iWldshrilBlol a.
V(
A
story)
that)
gives 1
new '
meaning 1
to the 1
word '
Suspense I
. ItI A If I
i iuuay:
ALFRED
HITCHCOCK
ENGULFS
YOU IN A
WHIRLPOOL
OF TERROR
AN r N.N IN
Basis
riATURI TIMES:
7:SS and 10:35
PLUS Foohirotto
"AMoHe CernWel"
: TECHNICOLOR
ranVsr
Off N DAILY 710O P. M.
t- QEB B1E REYNOLDS CURI JURGENS JO HN S AXOK
black shoes and sheer stocking
failed to show any of the wear
and tear which an ordeal such
as she described would have in
flicted. And her once bruise on
her left arm failed to tally with
her account of being struck in the
mouth by one of her captors after
he locked her in the bathroom of
an unidentified house in the Chi
cago area before her release.
Hart said his daughter is suf
fering from nervous exhaustion
and is under a physician's care
somewhere in Chicago. He said
he did not know when they would
return to their Short Hills, N.J.,
home along with Miss Hart's
fiance, Stanley Gaines, 2.1, of
Kayetteville, W.Va., who flew in
from New Jersey with Hart Fri
day.
How Miss Hart, who is to marry
Gaines Aug. 29, came tox Chicago
and if she came alone remained
a mystery.
Richard Auerbach, agent - in
charge of the FBI's Chicago of
fice, refused to give details of
what was known to the FBI where
the girl has been since her dis
appearance, or what parts of her
story still were under investigation.
In a statement to newsmen,
Hart said:
"As you know my daughter is
presently under sedation due to
sheer exhaustion. Before she re
ceived such treatment from com
petent medical authority, she ad
vised me that there was no ab
duction and that she does not re
member what went on.
"It appears that this' might well
be another recurrence from her
1957 automobile accident with the
same kind of imaginary dreams
that she had then.
"It is obvious that she needs
medical care. When she is able
to travel, we will take her to her
home in Short Hills."
Hart said his daughter had suf
fered amnesia after a 1957 auto
accident which occurred when
she was thrown from a car while
visiting Gaines, then University
of Virginia student.
Auerbach said Miss Hurt's art.
mission that her story of being
kidnaped was a hoax came after
about 90 minutes of questioning
and after discrepancies in her
story had been pointed out.
The story was all part of a
dieam," the FBI agent said.
Metal Firms
Close Ranks
NEW YORK (API ,- The Big
Three aluminum manufacturers
have closed ranks against the
United Steelworkers" bid for a 15
cent hourly pay raise.
The Reynolds Metal Co. reject
ed the request Friday, joining the
Aluminum Co. of America and the
Kaiser Aluminum Chemical Corp
which had rejected the proposal
two days before.
But all three companies said
negotiations would continue in the
hope of avoiding a strike when
contracts expire July 31.
Aluminum talks have lagged
since the nationwide steel strike
began July 15.
Agreements in the aluminum
industry traditionally are based
on those reached in steel, but this
the Steelworkers are trying
Idi a reversal.
Wages in the aluminum indus
try -run irom .7fi to 12.91 an
hour, compared with a prestrike
average of $.1.10 an hour in steel
Liberaces
Mend Rift
BEVERLY HILLS. Calif. (AP)
All Is sweet music again be
tween the brothers "Liberace.
George, the violinist, and Lee,
the piano-playing fellow with the
candelabrum, publicly patched up
their rift over dinner Thursday
night at the otel where George
and his orchestra play.
Their mother, Mrs. Frances
Liberace, who's been trying to
get the brothers together again
for a year, wasn't at the reunion
because of a cold. Friends said
the rift had started when the
brothers decided to go their sep
arate ways professionally.
The brothers toasted each oth
er. Lalcr Liberace joined the band
briefly to play a few piano num
bers for the dancers. He com
mented jokingly that the cadela
brum atop the piano wasn't up to
par.
"I'll see that you get a better
one, he promised George.
Two-Stage Nike
Fired Perfectly
POINT ARGUELLO. Calif
(AP) The Naval Research t.hn.
ratory says a two-stase Nilce-ASP
rocket performed perfectly as it
nuriea a 50-pound oav bad 140
miles aloft Friday.
The laboratory is conducting
tne project to study the effects
solar flares. It reoorted that
struments in the navloari had
transmitted dala for 7- minutes
before the rocket plunged into the
sea.
NEW YORK (AP)-Feeling beat.
mother?
Kids got you down? Feel irrita
ble, rundown just not as well as
you used to be?
Well, relax. You're probably
not sick. You're just tired. Most
young mothers are, reports Dr.
Leonard L. Lovshin of the Cleve
land Clinic Foundation.
He has an article on the subject
i the July issue of Postgraduate
Medicine.
'A tired mother is not neces-
Klamath Camp Fire Girls
Begin Camp Preparations
Camp Fire Girls throughout thelflashlieht batteries, rherki no nor-
ruamain area are naming meir sonai belongings and sewing on
Meepmg ags on sneives, lesung name tapes.
Four New Jets
To Zoom Over
Oregon Trail
Deadly Radium
Needles Stolen
ABILENE, Tex. (AP) Four
radium needles which a doctor
called "dangerous as an atomic
explosion" were reported stolen
from a doctor's office here Fri
day.
The needles emit gamma rays
which can burn, sterilize, or kill
a human being.
Or. Sol Estes, who said the
needles were in a lead box inside
a 600-pound sale carted' off from
his office, said the needles cost
$1,040 each.
'Within two hours, a person
who put the needles in his shirt
pocket would he seriously in
jured," Estes said. "Over a pro
longed period it could be fatal."
Customer Buys
Japanese Steel
FONTANA, Calif. (AP) - Offi
cials of the strikebound Kaiser
steel plant had the unhappy ex
perience Friday of watching 1,200
tons of Japanese steel delivered
to a customer at Kaiser's door
step.
The steel went to the Graver
Tank k Mfg. Co. plant, a few
yards south of the Kaiser plant.
A Fontana Chamber of Com
merce pamphlet says Graver,
which makes gasoline storage
tanks, settled here to be close to
its source of supply, Kaiser.
Lightning Hits
Explorer Scout
BOULDER, Colo. (AP) Rescue
squads carried a lB-year-old Ex-
plower- Scout to safetv Frirlav
night after he had been burned
and knocked unconscious by a
lightning bolt on 1.1.000-foot Paw
nee Pass west of Boulder.
The youth, William MacDonald
ol Denver, was rescued by mem
bers of the Rocky Mountain Res-
cue Unit and the I.ongmont Res
cue squad, led by Boulder County
Deputy Sheriff Dale Goeti.
Two Old Friends
Meet On Street
SPOKANE (AP) - A cnunle nf
old friends accidentally hnmiwl
into one another at a towntnwn
intersection Friday, their first
meeting since attendine school tn.
gether 30 years ago.
Police said an auinmnhiie
driven by Mrs. Thelma Cramp of
Avery. Idaho, smashed into the
rear of one driven by Arthur S.
nerman.
There were no ininri nri
naturally, no hard feelings.
Brucellosis
Rating Made
SALEM lAPl Oreonn u
tilied Friday that it has'become
the 90th tlatA n h. i
...... c ... uc tiei-imril
a modified certified brucellosis
area.
The U.S. Department of Agri
Culture certifiratinn mrant IK
no more than nne nr ini nt iu
cattle or five per cent of the herds
in ine siaie are interien with
diseases.
Klamath Pilli, Oraion
txrvlnf Sflutharn Oraton
and Northarn California
rur.nir.an sally rxcant Saturda hj
Southarn Oraion Publtihlni Company
main ai Espianacl
Phona TUxtdo 4-8111
FRANK IENK1NS. tailor
I1U, JENKINS, Manailni Editor
l-LOYD WVNNI. Clljr Editor
Entarod aa aacond claia mattar at tha
nnai oittca at Mamath ralli, Oraion.
on Auiuat 90. 190a. undar act of
Comma. March 3, ISTft. Second-tlan
poataia paid at Klamath rain. Oraion.
no oi aooiiionai malllnf otfleaa.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Carrlar
1 Month I SO
a Mnotha r a on
I Yaar .! 00
Mail in Advanca
1 Month ....-.
a Mentha ..
1 Vaar .
Carrlar and Daalara
woor dayi, copy Se
Sundaya. ropy ... .loo
UNITED PRESS INTER NATIONAL
ASSOCIATED PRESS
AUDIT BUREAU OP CIRCULATION
Suhacrioara not rooalvlng dallvary ol
tnair narain and naws, maaa onnna
TUxado 4-ni bofora t P M. Aftaf
T P.M . phona Maurlra Millar. Ctr.
rutatien Manafar at TVxado 4-4TSS
1 1 SO
i.w
-SHOO
the
COMMITEE ELECTS
SALEM (API-Sen. Ward Cook
iD-Portlandi was elected chair
man of the Legislative Interim
Committee on Education Fririnv
Rep. Al Flecel (D-Rnsehnmi
was chosen vice chairman, and
William Bade, Portland tax re
.searcher, was elected secretary
me committee s next meet nu
will be Aug. 2S-29.
Tired Mothers Simply TiredThe Good Doctor Asserts
Isarily maladjusted she it spent: tup with all the jobs she has (et
not burdened with guilt merelj before her.
overly conscientious: and. most --l- ,u. i . v.....i j
. 1 cu tiiv urai iiuouanu js a
.important of all, she is not sick difficult creature, and the bound-
- juai in eo, ne wrote.
"We physicians, in our desire
to be of service, often forget this,
as witness the long list of medi
cations we prescribe to be swal
lowed or injected for relief of
fatigue."
The tired mother is usually
worrisome and tense and overly
conscientious. She just can't keep
Down The Drain.
Money Salvaged
AGDIIDV Til ni. ... , . .
wviu rrtrir., 1VJ.
(AP)
MOO, it was a case nf nnu'.vm.
see-it-now-you-don't.
of. rainwater washed It into
storm drain and it was gone.
Rounding up John Giuliann. cilv
yard forerun. Mrs. Sklanski and
a small crowd of curious town
people headed for an outflow pipe
at Deal tLake. Out came her
handbag with its day's receipts
irom ner bakery shop
She said campers this vear will
find two new tent olatfnrms with
, . ' . y aiier a menr
new green tents covering them in for E Aug. 1.
Iho Forest Pruarae nnil anJ m ....... B
This flurrv of activity is one of
me neralds of summertime. And
for most Camp Fire Girls camp
time.
Camp Ka-est-a. the Klamath
Council of Camp Fire Girls resi
dent camp at Lake of the Woods
ill begin its 20th season, August 8.
Mrs. Naomi French, executive
director and c,amp director, said
loo - - . t I
iuu vauiucio am eAuevieu lor eacn
INDEPENDENCE. Mo. (UPI)-Lr .k. ,u j... '.r.j
- , . , "i ocven-uay pel lulls.
While, covered wagons plod along, only a few reservations remain
mur iacucai air command a last- open for each week.
est riiHU aiarngmers win zoom
over the Oregon Trail Sundav
from Independence to the West
Coast to honor the Oreeon Cen
tennial.
The swift flieht will he on con
trast to lone arduous months nf
covered wagon travel and early
pioneers went through to 'reach'
Oregon and the long months a
croun of modern-day ninneern "are
now covering the Oregon Trail-
also by covered wagon.
The planes will leave nearbv
Richards-Bebaur Air Force Base
at 11 a.m. Sunday and are sched
uled to arrive at Hillsboro, Ore
airfield near Portland at 2:30 p.m
Mavor William Sermon anrl
Chamber of Commerce President
PhllllO Davis of Inrienenrienre
will be on hand for the take off
and. will send letters to their coun
terparts in Independence, Ore.
The 1.500-mi e-an-hour fiirhters
will demonstrate their capabilities
for deploying anywhere n the
world by use of air-to-air refuel
ing. They are scheduled to meet
with a tanker over Casper, Wyo.
ine planes will be minted hv
Squadron Commander Lt. Cnl
Delynn Anderson of Louisville.
Ky.: Capt. Robert F. Purrh nf
Topeka, Kan.; Capt. Cecil Le
fevers of Fort Worth, and 1st Lt.
Richard Lougee of Milwaukee.
lhe four starfichters are haseH
at George Air Force Base. Vir-.
lorvuie, calif., and air ved at
Richards-Bebaur Saturday.
Chairmanship
Not Desired.
Official Says
PORTLAND (AP) Reo. Al
Flegel (D-RoseburB) Fridav said
he will not be a candidale for
chairman of the Oregon Demo
cratic Party.
'I consider it an honor that a
great many people have asked
me to be a candidate. . . . How
ever, it is with rezret that I must
decline further consideration for
that office," he said.
Flegel said he would not have
ftime to serve in the nnst. if
named, because of his work .on
legislative interim committees
and the Interstate Compact Com
mission.
So fer. no one has annnnnr-ed
he would seek, the position left
vacant by the death of Dave Epps
of Sweet Home.
Party officials have said they
will pick a new "chairman short-
y after a memorial dinner here
less activity of normal childrea.
can produce fatigue in parent
who merely observe it," says Dr.
Lovshin.
How do you treat neoole lika
that? The best way, says Dr.
Lovshin. is to convince them thai
we all have different amounts of
energy and a mother has to
learn to live within her supply of
energy.
And then, he suceests. the dnr.
tor might point out that the last
generation of tired mothers cam
through it all very well.
ANNUAL TREK
CORVAI.LIS (AP)-About lo.rmo
persons are expected to take part
in the 14th annual Mary's Peak
Trek Aug. 2, a benefit for crippled
children.
unit, near Hideaway, with two, " 5CTen Tn'
camner lent, ,H . .JfV ,ormer member of lhe 0re80n
fnr th. nrooraor, ;A HoUSC. m'' be a
for the program aid course srnnn
New green tents have .been added T .r' ,
In the nlalfnrmc in Vi,l IT-l. ml... Se the J0D-
, ...... ... i,... ulm
Bird) and to Hideaway tents.
Also, the came commission r-min.
selor will have a new staff tent
which has been built near the
caretaker's tent.
Improvements and replacement
of the equipment at Camp Esther
Applegate (known as Camp Ka-e'st-a
to Camp Fire Girls) are marie
possible by profits from the Camp
r ire uins annual candy mint sale.
Eleven months of in-town program
for Camp Fire Girls and main
tenance of the headquarters office
in Klamath Falls are financed
through the Klamath County Unit.
ed Fund.
Swimminc. canoeing arrherv
hikes, trips, horseback riding and
camp crafts are among the chief
activities for campers this sum
mer. Many of the campers' inter.
ests will center around conserva
tion as part of Camp Fire Girls
national project, sne Cares Do
You?". Their activities for this
will range from tree-planting to
wildlife study.
candidate, but would not actively
yrFOR THEV
REST
f OF YOUR j
Carlson LlrC.
Mattress, ajwpp'
TUfTD
Guaranteed 7 Years!
Guaranteed 7 Years!
Carlson's Mattress
and Upholittry Company
2405 So. 6th . TU 4-4510
He Said 'Shorty'
And He Meant It
BOSTON (AP)-It finally hap
pened Fridav
Democratic Sen. Kevin B. Har
rington of Salem "Shorty "
UnK..- i ... . .
mtu w , . i.cmuiKiuii is six leet. nine
When Mrs. Henrietta Sklanski lost inches tall and he has never been
called that before
It was a senate visitor whn
Her hanrihaff mnfainina tun I n i it .. . ..
. , , , " " n-aucu nHiringion anortv The
cash, destined for a bank, slipped visitor. Conrad Furrows, 38, of
tall.
MM
M.
50th ANNIVERSARY
rnFi
SATURDAY
August 1st 1959
ML
BROADWAY HALL
. MALIN
Tickets 51.00 per perto
Dancing 9:30 - I
Bohemian Pastry
and Coffee
far Sale At
Lunch Counter
fa Entertainment During The
Evening by Bohemian Dancers
Doing the "Beseda" Dance
Music by
FRED DIVISEK
Polka Band
of San Francisco
Playing Czech music, Polkas,
Waltzes and Modern Music
The
Welcome Wagon
Hostess
Will Knock on Your Door
with Gifts & Greetings
from Friendly Business,
Neighbors and Your
Civic and Social
Welfare Leaders
On the occasion of:
Arrival of Newcomers to
Klamath Falls
.No cost or obligation
Phone TU 2-0834
Christian Education for Your Children
VACATION BIBLE SCHOOL
libit Stories, Singing, Handicraft, Gomes
Trained teachers and Christ-ctnttrod lesions
JULY 27TH AUGUST 7TH
9 - 11:43 A.M.
ZION LUTHERAN CHURCH
EUvtnth A High
Call TU 4-4793
OPPORTUNITY DAYS
15)1511 Anno
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