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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 14, 1959)
PAGE 2 A HERALD AND NEWS. Klamath Falls. Ore Friday, August 14. 1053 'Dennis the menace" 'Oao is suffe actin'siuy! He HIM CUT THE WATER' Steel Strike; No Progress NEW YORK IAP)-Ncgotiations In the month-old steel strike re sume here today with no indica tion of progress toward breaking the deadlock. Ranking representatives of the Industry, the striking United Stecl vorkcrs and the Federal Media tion and Conciliation Service were absent as second-string teams of bargainers met Thursday.- The strike by 500.000 members of the union has shut down al most 90 per cent of the nation's steel production and has idled more than loo.ono employes in al lied industries. STEEP RISE . India's Dhauli Gorge gains 10, 000 feet in elevation in 35 miles. Winding through the central Him alayas, it forms a link in a much traveled trade route to Tibet. Last year 49 billion dollars was spent for new construction in this country. Housing equipment and supply companies invested aver 2R million dollars in daily newspapers to insure thai they reached t h e major portion of their market. I GLASSES The 0. & Navy picked Riy Ban Sua Glasses is standard equipment fcr the recent "Deep freere" upediticm to the Antarctic. The nuson? Unequelled lire ftratection. Now you cm give your eyes this . tame fine (lire protection, In i choice of the season's most fashionable (rimes end colors. teme In-try on pair todiy. t mm m - i IfH W E t E I Town & Country f14!500 Certified Watchmaker i-4i8biW'.i AUSCH A IOM St K 'tun i IIVI WIN fill M0RIIS . Ill T0UI OUllll ROBIN one MYERS NEW & USED CARS 1200 E. Main TU 2-551 1 let a lifeguard jr. . fr AKIKO KOJIMA Miss Universe Beauty Queen Raps Medico TOKYO (AP) Miss Universe returned to her native Japan to day on the tail of a typhoon in the midst of another storm about her bust. "Very rude," snapped Akiko kojima in denying a report of a Tokyo surgeon that he had inject ed her with a cupful of plastic to enlarge her bust and help her to a 37-23-38 figure. "I would like to contfont that doctor in front of everyone in this room," declared the 22-year-old fashion model. Miss Kojima's homecoming was delayed 12 hours. Her plane stopped at Wake Island waiting for Typhoon Georgia to clear Ja pan. - i Lad Accused Of Rundown NEW YORK (API-Barry Gold enherg, 10, has hcen accused of deliberately running down a 13 year-old boy during a wild auto ride. The victim is Peter Ramos, who sulfered a broken pelvis, brok leg and Internal injuries. His eon- dilion Was described as "still crit ical hul slightly improved" today Police gave this account: Goldenberg borrowed the car of a relative, Arnie Geller, Thurs day, rounded up six friends, and set out to find some youths who recently beat up two of Golden berg's friends. Patrolman Kevin Peltus said that while cruising around, Gold enberg deliberately swerved the car toward a group of children at play. After the child was hit, the car sped off. Pettus commandeered another car and crowded Golden berg's auto to the curb. Geller was given a summons charging him wilh permitting an unlicensed person to operate his car. Goldenberg was charged with (elonious assault, leaving the scene of an accident and driving without a license. ifi r '' i i ii Fake Copies Of 'Masters' Big Business ruiia 'rttAi me Dooming market for "old masters" has made the forgery branch of the art business one of the most lucra- tie in the postwar years. A painting signed Paul Signac might have fetched M0.0G0 at Sotheby's, internationally famous lxndon auction room, had it not been retired just in time recently. It was the work of one of the band of forgers working in France, turning out paintings for rich but unwary art buyers These pictures rarely are sold here under their valuable signa tures. France's F.B.I. the Sur- ete Nationale is one of the rare police forces wilh a special serv ice for the detection of fake works o' art. It is headed by dapper Chief Inspector Guy Isnard, who looks more like an art expert man a detective. The forgers know they will have a hard time getting past Isnard and the representative of the French museums. The latter su pervise, at the Customs oflices. every work of art leaving France. ii tney come across a painting which they believe should remain in the country as part of France's patrimony, they have a right to stop it But there is no ban on the ex port of copies of old masters, pro vided they are billed as such. What happens when Iheyreaeh the oth or side of the Atlantic is of no concern of the French. Forgeries which somehow escape the lynx-eyed Isnard are usually succcsslul because of the signa lure the one thing -which definite ly brands a fake is not put on until the picture gets to America According to Isnard when the paintings leave here they have an innocuous signature like "Pierre Dupont" or "Jean Marchand.' ' To rub out this signature and replace it by that of a time-hon ored master is child's plav," he says, "and it means that no of fense is committed until the pic lure reaches its destination." hxperts consider that at least 140.000 forged Utrillos have been smuggled into the United States, plus 113.214 Watleaus and 10,000 Corots. Cnrot is known to have painted only 3,000 pictures in his lifetime. At an exhibition Inspector Is nard put on a couple of years ago in Paris, lo endeavor to put the public wise to these forgeries, there were some 60 mona Lisas. The most frequently forged painters today, according to one gallery owner, are Monticelli, Utril lo, Vlaminck and Picasso, in that order. IVA Leader Raps Ike PORTLAND (AP) - Hours after the House approved the Eisen hower - backed anti - racketeering bill, the president of the Interna tional Woodworkers of America Union bitterly criticized the Pres ident Thursday. A. F. Hartung also lashed out at Gov. Mark Hatfield and those who would weaken the labor movement through legislation. His remarks were telecast (over KH TV). Hartung said he hoped Congress will not help destroy the strength oi tne labor movement and there by play into the hands of the Com munists and enemies of labor. Promoting the AFL-CIO backed Shelley labor bill, Hartung said "It was designed to get at the crooks whether in labor or man agement, but it seems that is not what the President wants, nor is it what the National Manulactur ers Assn. wants. Hartung charged that the prin cipal sponsors of legislation aimed at weakening and destroying la bor are "the great and weallhv companies . . . supported principal ly by congressmen from the South who are interested in see ing that the South remains large ly unorganized." Hatfield came in for Harding's criticism for not acting on the President s housing bill veto. An adult male capybara may measure four feet in length and weigh more than 100 pounds. Klamath Tails. Oregon aVrvinf Sou t htm Ore inn and Northern California PuhlmhtH daily except Saturday by Southern Oregon Publishing. Coco?.ny Main at ctpianacie Phone TVxedo 4- 111 FRANK 1KNK1NS. Editor HILL JENKINS. Managing tdltor FLOYD WYNNE. ClUr Editor ' Entered aecond claM matter at the I poil offlrt ai Klamath Falls, Oregon l on Auguat 10. 1906. under art of ! Con ire. March- 3, 1(179 Scond-cla pottage patd at Klamath Fall. Oregon, and at additional mailing Mftcea. SUBSCRIPTION RATES ; Carrier I i Momn ,-, . i to a mnninj , ,, . . , mi 1 Year fi OO Mall In Advance t Mnnth 1 SO Months ,,. ., t II Ml I Year 15 00 Carrier and Dealers Week days, ropy . M undas. ropy Ine UNITED PRF.SS INTFRN ATIONAX ASSOCIArtO PRESS AUDI! BUREAU OF CIRCULATION Subarrthr not receiving deliver at their Herald and New. please phone TVxfda 4-llI before 1PM After 1 P M phone Maurice Millar Ctr CUlalMB Manager at TUxed 4-47 5X if 7 liNY PELLETS Of RADIOACTIVE pseased res Jet-Age Tower Views Field On All Sides NEWARK, N.J. Ofl-Busy New ark Airport has just completed a new jel-age control tower in an unlikely spot in the smack middle of the flying field. Port of New York Authority, which operates the airport, says the 150-foot .tower is the first to be located in the center ol any major flying field. In this position it gives an unobstructed view of the 2,300-acre airport. Control tow ers usually are on terminal build ings at the airport fringes. The tower is another "first" for the Newark airport, which has been one of the major testing grounds for new aviation ideas. Instrument approach equipment vas first tried here as was the Civil Aeronautics Administration approved centerline flashing ap proach light system. To the 2'i million passengers passing through Newark Airport each year, the tower will resem ble a thick concrete pillar rising out of a round dish, with three pie-shaped floor Nevels. At the very top are glass control cab and radar bubble; All occupied portions of the $1,750,000 control tower are sheathed in translucent plastic identical to that which roofed- over the U.S. Pavilion in the Brus sels World Fair. The translucent material, developed by the Kal wall Corp., of Manchester, N.H., glows at night when interior lights are on making the tower its own warning beacon. Inside the tower 75 Federal Avi ation Administration employes op erate the maze of electronic equip ment needed to control the air port's traffic. The tower is the airport's fourth in its 31-year his tory, and is twice as high as its predecessor. SLA Opn Tonire 6:45 CmrtnuMut Sat, It Sun. tram 1 2:45 p i e Starts SUNDAY! SPINE -mi ING, SiPERSHOCK SENSATIONS! 'Return riliS ii of the icAwZuijftHflii FLY ?W VINCENT PRICE -fl I v. IrKjV I " . - HHekafeaaMeSitkAiftatttSi H-ttieanM-4rn Mi ATOMIC MEDICINE AS tfi N.OCiS T- severs oc t atom kCeLAfe MS J6 ih COBALT "GUN"s-ocs PIPCACE ?6 INTO CAClRXS TSSuE cancekx as. 6010 ATOMIC DETECTIVE... Th MOiEMENTOF RAlXTACTH 5lBS-A 'KTOJuCED fO TV-E XXX CAN Be FO.XV.EO S LraiNCA C-EC-E? CCLi's"?. TniS scientists in PAT-NOSNC- ttO IN STuPlES OF CCULAT10N. Twelve airlines serve the airport one of three major fields in the metropolitan New York City area OPEN DAILY 7:DO P. M. END5 TONIGHT! ' JAMES STEWART rSATURDAYI-i 3 BIG SHOWS 3 (See Ad This Poqe) Tops Everything Ueswer Done IMF trjsrjranr MARIE McDONALD-SESSUE HAYAKAWA I Ends Saturdoyl" I jSTWART a m i m Kissless Pat Will Smooch In Next Movie By BOB THOMAS , HOLLYWOOD (AP) It was all a mistake that he got known as the kissless Hollywood hero, says Pat Boone. To prove it, he'll do some smooching in his new movie. The singing star explained the mixup before descending into a man-made cavern for "To the Center of the Earth.'.' The script calls for some love scenes wilh curvesome Diane Baker. "'The publicity got out of hand," Pat said. "Even in foreign coun tries they were referring to me as the- man who wouldn't kiss his leading lady. "It happened when 1 was mak ing April Love. One day the director, Henry Levin, thought 1 should give Shirley Jones a kiss in a scene. He asked- me if I thought it was all right. "I didn't know what to say. The issue had never come up because there had been no kissing scenes MjMtiM THIS SATURDAY I Q Big 1 1 gB IT I ISSn O Shows VSjStV rl0M w& 4tj7 Mm 1 H.-Sf tyW i? r xSlB Feature 7:40 Only JkmmtJ PAnj.r.TTr. goddartJ Feoture 11:50 Only' Regular Prices' Feoture 9:35 Only 1 Come ?orly! n X m . I I rf 1 Aim . M II TZ f HTD. iTiTJill yMiB t jrjjTTjj; W techn,colob- fcl . . . Now she knew she could no longer be a nun 1 If 1 V V i-ni i4; i ! yJT 'SIT 7H' ill I i T .uor DAME EDITH EVANS DAME PEGGY ASHCR0FT DEAN JAGGER KSif with MILDRED DUNP ;k SCREENPLAY BY ROBERT ANDERSON FROM THE 800K BY KATHRYN C.'HULM6 in the script. I wanted time to discuss it with my wife and to think about how (he fans and my church would react. But Henry wanted i, decision right then, so I said no. "The next thing I knew, all the papers and wire services carried the news that I wouldn't kiss Shirley because of my religion. It created such an uproar that Henry and the producer, David Weisbart, wanted to write a kiss ing scene into the movie. I de clined again, because it would seem as though I were going back on my principles." Now he has talked the situation over with Mrs. Boone, Pat said, "and she agrees it would be all right, although she would prefer to keep that part of our lives solely to ourselves. She realizes that love scenes are a part of this business, and I hope other people will, too." The lanky Tennesseean is a wmim irnei Filled with unexpected drama -deep within a seldom-seen world -deeper in the pageant and violence of the . African Congo -and deepest of all in the, conscience of. - a young and partner with 20th Century-Pox in the Jules Verne classic, which d stars 'Arlene Dahl and Jamei Mason. BILL APPROVED WASHINGTON (APi-Th Sen ate has approved. 47-45, a bill to set up a Youth Conservation Corps. It is not likely to reach the House this year. The corps would be like the old Civilian Con servation Corps. MY DAD" WASHINGTON' (API What makes you a safe driver, George L. Barrier III was asked Thurs day night after winning second place in the teen-age safe driving Road-e-o. "My dad," the 18-year-old Kan napolis, N. C, youth promptly replied with a grin. I Ml l f '.lUVIHIMi'ltll,'!: 1 113 Peter Finch ij.. tKe cynical Congo Surgeon, Dr. Forlunati