PAGE 2 A
Life-Saving Bogus Kidney
Introduced To Physicians
CAR MEL, Calif. AP) - A lire
laving artificial kidney which can
operate continuously without hu
man monitoring was introduced
today to the medical profession.
In the three months since its
development the instrument has
helped to save the lives of six out
of ci;;ht persons who were in seri
ous condition because of kidney
failure, its originators said.
In one instance it has been
credited with saving a hunter
whose abdomen was torn open by
an accidental gun shot wound. It
ran uninterruptedly for U days to
bring the man through a crisis.
The man was very close to
death from loss of blood, mangled
Hdncys and peritonitis, but he is
now over the initial crisis al
though still in a hospital and his
bill to date is about $l3,fl(H) said
lir. K. II. Stribner, of the l.'nivor
sity. of Washington Medical School
at Seattle.
Oregon Weather
By THK ASSOCIATED I'KKSS
24 hours lo 4:. HI a.m. Friday
.Max. Mill. I'rcp.
Astoria 52 1.27
Baker 3 32 .03
Bend 48 37 -
Burns 41 30
Cliemult 3B 32
Chiloquin 4H 32
Kugene 1 5H T
Lakcvicw 42 34 .03
Medford KO 51
Newport 5!) 50 1.20
North Bend 03 60 .17
Pendleton 51 45 .05
Portland Airport 44 41 .11!)
Bed Bluff 59 41 -
Redmond 47 37 T
Roseburg 01 58 T
Salem 00 40 .lfij
The Dalles 31 30 .IB
Eastern Oregon Mostly
cloudy and mild through Saturday.
Scattered showers likely Friday
evening and again Saturday after
noon. Low tonight 34-44: high Sat
urday 45-58. Local gusty southerly
winds.
Western Oregon Mostly
cloudy wilh periods of rain
through Saturday. Continued mild.
Low tonight 45-55; high Saturday
52-04. Southwesterly coastal winds
15-30 miles an hour tonight, be
coming southerly lo southeasterly
and 30-40 Saturday. Gale warnings
displayed.
Northern Oregon Beaches
Intermittent rainy periods Satur
day. Rain moderate at times local
ly. Strong southerly beach winds
20-30 miles an hour with higher
gusts. Small craft warnings dis
played offshore. Temperature
range Si-M.
Grants Pass and vicinity Con
siderablc cloudiness through Sat
urday wilh a few rainy periods.
Low tonight 48-53; high Saturday
58-03.
RSAUV
GOOD!
OPEL
Europe's Most Distinguished Economy Car!
35 Miles Per Gallon!
The Pride of Germany . . .
Built by General Motors in their own factory in Ger
many . . . since 1929. Sold and serviced by the 3300
Buick dealers through-out the U.S.
PARTS Readily available from Buick dealers every
where. GUARANTEE by General Motors through Buick
dealers everywhere.
SERVICE factory trained mechanics at Buick deal
ers everywhere. A real and permanent home for your
Opel here and throughout the U.S. A true economy
car with lots of room and comfort, and trunk room
galore . . . built with the excellence of German
manufacture.
SEDANS and STATION WAGONS
In Stock for Immediate Delivery!
Urn Vinde Buick Co.
1330 Main Ph. 4-3141
Dr. Scribncr described the new
instrument to the Western Society
for Clinical Research. The instru
ment was developed by Dr. Scrib
ncr and a colleague, Dr. J. K. 'I.
Caner.
Most artificial kidneys operate
only for a few hours, then have
to be re-serviced. They also re
quire bluod transfusions and the
attendance of doctors and tech
nicians as well as nurses. The
new instrument can keep going
with only an occasional checkup
by a nurse. Dr. Scribncr said.
To operate the new instrument
an artery in the arm is tapped
and a tube inserted in it. This
tube leads through the freezing
compartment of a household type
refrigerator. Blood flowing
tljrough this tube is cooled to the
point where clotting and bacterial
infection are prevented. The cool
ing also prevents destruction of
platelets, the disc - shaped blood
particles which promote natural
clotting to heal wounds.
The blood is cleared of its poi
son elements by passing through
cellophane envelope submerged
in a bath containing water and an
assortment of chemicals. Then
purified blood is piped back into
the system through a vein in the
arm.
More experimenting is needed
belore instruments like this can
be built for general use, but thus
lar no drawback has developed lo
prevent eventually their wide
utilization. Dr. Scribncr said.
Home
Extension
KE.N'O UNIT
Homemade soup was demon
stratcd and several diflerenl kinds
were sampled by 17 members ot
the Kcno Home Extension for
luncheon at the home of Mrs. Joe
DeGrande.
During the meeting it wa
agreed to send Ruth Gustavson
agent, a gift certilicate. Her mar
riage took place on Christmas Eve
at her home in Minnesota.
U was also mentioned that Keno
had turned in the amount of $40
for the Hospital Survey Fund.
Cards were sent to Walt Layton.
Mrs. Frank Hunter, and Sergeant
and Mrs. Norman Flock.
An open meeting will be held
February 10 at the home of Mrs.
Henry Buckingham.
On The Record
KLAMATH TAIA.B
JIIRTMN
filRLS
BEDDOE Born lo Mr. and Mri,
Arthur Beddoe January 27 in Klam
nth Valley Hospital a girl, weighing 8
lbs., A' 7 ozs.
GARRY Born to Mr. and Mm. Mar
tin Garry January 27 in Klamath Val
ley Hospital a girl, weighing 7 lbs., 15
ozi.
Ittllll SUM MARY I
Boys: 44 Girls:
39
U.S. Sued
For Air Crash
SAN FRANCISCO (UPl Pe
dro A. Carbajal. Mountain View,
sued the federal government for
21,230 Thursday because a jet
fighter crashed into his house.
The suit accused the Air Force
and the pilot, the late Robert
Mulvchill Jr., of negligence. Cara-
hajal charged that his home and
its contents were destroyed in the
crash Feb. 1, 157.
NOT TOO OLD
NANTUCKET, Mass. (AP)-At
the age of 02, George K. Grimes
chiesn't feel he is too old to seek
his 11th three-year term as town
assessor. He announced his candi
dacy (or the coming election
Thursday night.
HERALD AND
Civil Suits
On File
With Clerk
These civil suits have been filed
in the county clerk's office:
Herman Sable maintains that
Clivc and Pearl Mcl'hcrson of Mid
land owe an $8,000 balance on
three promissory notes signed be
tween February 11)48 and April
l!i;7. lie seeks payment of the bal
ance or foreclosure and sale of
mortgaged property in Midland.
The trustees of Oregon-Washing
ton Carpenters-Employers Health
and Welfare Trust Fund seek. ac
cess to payroll' records of Ivan
Kandra, grain elevator operator
of Merrill. Trustees maintain Kan
dra failed to, contribute a' 10-cent
per manhour feo lo the fund.
Rudolph Kunz and Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Brightman seek settlement
of a title dispute with Bryant
Mountain Sawmill Company over
property in Malln.
Two suits have been filed re
garding a home-building contract
between Uarley J. Hart and Mel
vin McCollum, Arthur Beddoe, and
others. Hart seeks payment of $8,
Mil for materials and services be
tween January 1D58 and July 1959
The other suit, tiled by Swan Lake
Moulding Company, seeks $260
from Hart, and others, for steel
posts and fencing supplied between
September 1958 and July 1959.
The State Industrial Accident
Commission lias brought suit
igainst three firms for contribu
tions to the workmen's compensa
tion fund which it claims were not
paid. Defendants, and amounts
claimed, are:
Clarence R. Badger, $130 be
tween April and June 1959, and
SI4( between July and October
1959: Charles Melvin Howie, $190
between July 1958 and May 1959,
ind $Wt between June and Septem
ber 1959; Rocky Point Lumber
Company, $142 between January
and March 1959, and $5-18 between
April and November 1959.
Missouri Dems
Slate Rally
SPRINGFIELD, Mo. (AP) -
Missouri Democrats, wilh some
thing extra at stake, are making
their annual rally here today and
Saturday the biggest in years
The extra incentive is the
chance that Sen. Stuart Symington
iD-Mo) will win the Democratic
presidential nomination.
Missouri parly workers are try
ing to build as big a boom a?
possible behind the senator.
One person they will try to im
press is Gov. David L. Lawrence
of Pennsylvania, who will lead an
8l-vote delegation to the National
Democratic Convention.
Gov. Lawrence will be the
peaker for Saturday night's Jack
son Day dinner, which Is expected
to draw 2,000 persons.
Writers' Guild
To Extend Pact
HOLLYWOOD (AP) The Writ
ers Guild of America will extend
for one week the terms of a con
tract with three major television
networks. The agreement was to
expire Saturday.
the guild bad threatened to
strike. About 100 writers are af
fected in the negotiations wilh Na
tional Broadcasting Co., Columbia
can Broadcasting Co.
Hi-Fi Stolen
HOLLYWOOD (AP) While
;i"tor Charlton Ileston was in
New York City, someone ap
parently entered his Coldwater
Canyon mansion and stole hi - fi
equipment valued at $750.
The loss was reported lo police
Thursday by Robert Bice, a friend
of Heston. Bice said he noticed
the loss while checking the house
during Ileston's absence.
MAMIE WINS AWAU1)
MOW YORK lUPll - Mrs.
Dwight D. Eisenhower, national
honorary chairman of the Heart
Fund for four successive years,
has been named recipient of Ihe
American Heart Assn.'s Heart of
the Year award. The award will
be presented to (lie President's
wife Tuesday at the White House.
Klamath fa III. Oregon
Serving Southern Oregon
and Northern California
Published dally except Saturday by
Southern Oregon Publishing Company
Main at Esplanade
Phone lUxedo 4-M11
FRANK JKNKINS. Editor
BILL JENKINS, Managing Editor
FLOYD WYNNE. City Editor
Entered as second clai matter at th
post office at Klamnth Fa Ha. Oregon,
on August 30. 1906. under art of
Congress, March 3, 187!) Second-class
postage paid at Klamath Falls. Oregon,
and at additional mailing of fleet.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Carrier
1 Month
1 1 V)
0 no
I IV
$ a mi
IIS no
6 M nnl hi . ,
I Year ..
Mail - In Advance.
1 Month
6 Months
1 Year .
Carrier and Dealer
Weeh days copy fte
Sundays, copv , lOe
UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
ASSOCIATED PRESS
AUDI! BUREAU OF CIHt.l'LA I ION
Subscribers not receiving delivery of
their Herald and News, please phone
TUxedo 4 111 before T PM After
T P M . phone Maurice Milter Clr-
eulauoa Manager at TUiedo 4-4 TM
NEWS, Klamath Falls. Ore.
"DENNIS THE MENACE"
1 THOUGHT yo) TOLO M IT
Budget-Balancing Scored
By Two Leading Democrats
NEW YORK (AP)-Sen. Hubert
II. Humphrey of Minnesota and
Adlai . Stevenson accused the
Eisenhower administration Thurs
day night of putting budget-
balancing above maintaining
peace.
Humphrey, an announced candi
date foe the Democratic prcsi
dential nomination, and Steven
son, a possibility, addressed more
than 750 persons at a dinner of
Americans for Democratic Action
(ADA).
The ADA, a pro-New Deal-Fair
Deal group, gave its annual
Roosevelt Day award to Steven
son for his contributions to for
eign policy. The award was pre
sented by Mrs. Franklin D. Roose
velt. Humprehy told the dinner guests
that the Eisenhower administra
tion has fallen down in mapping
a sound future for the nation,
negotiating for disarmament and
seeking to banish want in the
world. Humphrey called these
things "the three great tests of
the age."
In the seven years of Republi
can administration, Humphrey
said, the nation has slipped in
science and technology, education,
housing and other essentials.
Stevenson, hitting at the ad
minjstration's "balancing the budg
FOUR OF TODAY'S MOST EXCITING
DRAMA OF YOUNG PEOPLE TO
0
wwv ii re W
JOAN BLACKMAN
, y lFridny Jammry 29.' IflBf)
VWHT SQUffTV.'
et" tactics said:
"This noble alliteration has rep
resented the sum of Republican
ambitions since 1932.
"To seem to do something with
out doing it, to substitute pious
rhetoric and insubstantial gestures
lor action, to treat our people as
though they had the intelligence
and aspirations of the higher apes,
to present to them no challenge,
to conceal or distort facts that
they may determine their fate
this is the era in which we have
been dragged, drugged and brain
washed." Rctyburn Refiles
For House Post
BONIIAM, Tex. (AP) - Speak
er of the House Sam Rayburn
iD-Tex) filed formally Thursday
for his 25th term in Congress from
Texas' predominantly rural 4th
Congressional District.
The 78-year-old Rayburn's notice
of candidacy for the office was
received by Deets Durrough,
chairman of the Fannin County
Democratic Executive' Committee.
Rayburn, who has been speaker
longer than any man before him,
lives on a farm just west of Bon-ham.
OPENS. TONIGHT 6:45
Continuous Saturday and
Sunday from 12:45
HAL WALLIS'
inj M-sUmnfl aW
CM ROBERT MIDDLETON
Two Anglers
Drown
In Pacific
WESTPORT. Wash. (API-Tradition
was tempered with tragedy
for a fishing boat and two of its
three crewmen on , the storm
tosseij Pacific Ocean off the south
west Washington coast Thursday
night.
The fishermen stayed in dan
gerous, turbulent waters to aid
four Coast Guardsmen in a dis
abled patrol boat. The fishing boat
sank. Two of its crewmen van
ished into the churning sea.
The drama began when the fish
ing vessel Barbara Lee called for
help to got through huge swells
at the narrow entrance to Grays
Harbor. All day, winds up to 55
miles an hour had raked the coast.
The Coast Guard sent the 52-foot
patrol boat Invincible to guide the
fishing boat across the bar. It was
a familiar procedure; the Grays
Harbor Bar is treacherous . for
small craft at all times. -
suddenly, a monstrous wave
knocked the Invincible bottom-
side up. The boat slowly righted,
but its engines were dead.
The 30-foot Barbara Lee stood by
in the rain and wind. It threw a
line aboard the Invincible. The line
broke. It tried fo attach another.
Then a mountain of water en
gulfed the Barbara Lee. First the
fishing boat's smokestack and an
tenna were swept away; then it
sank. The Invincible got one fish
erman, Harold Pernula of Cord
ova, Alaska, aboard. The others,
Skipper Robert Bolam and crew
man Ted Sigardson, both of West-
port, were nowhere to be seen.
Two other Coast Guard boats
prowled the stormy waters in the
hope that the men might be found
bobbing about in life jackets. The
Coast Guard sent an airplane, but
loul weather forced it back. The
sheriff's office ordered the beach
patrolled in case the men were
washed ashore.
THE RANK ORGANIZATION ptismti
V 31 fa
Ont Day Only
Wednesday Fb. 3
ESQUIRE
THE
STARS... IN THE MOST SCORCHING
IGNITE THE SCREEN IN YEARS!
PRODUCTION
u
Dispute Over
May Move inTO infegranon
.,Lnvi hp) - A Sen-Ivor (D-Tenn). That would emntw
u-ashin'GTON (AP) - A Sen
ate dispute over anti-poll tax
measures threatened today to
spread to the controversy over
school integration.
An irfp said Sen. Herman Tal
nudge (D Ga) may inject his
pH constitutional
ment to vest exclusive control over
iho niihlie schools in the siaies
Such action would depend on how
the situation in the Senate aeu
OPS.
Up for action is a constitutional
amendment by Sen. spcssaiu ..
innH in.Flm to bar any stales
(mm renuirine navmont of a poll
congressional or presidential elec
tions.
Holland offered his proposal as
a rider to another constitutional
omnnrlmpnt hv Sen. Estcs Kelau-
New Machine
Eases Burden
A new computing machine ca
pable of producing twice the work
in half the time is making its de
but in the assessor's office.
The machine, size of a large ta
ble, is called a Burroughs Electro
Mechanical Computer. With t h e
help of its 13 built-in computers
it can handle at least four long
complex assessment sheets in a
minute.
It replaces two machines, which
required two operators.
In one step it can gulp down
values from all assessment sheets
and determine Ihe total assessed
valuation for the roll. On a ledger
sheet it can compute and print
tax rates, values, discounts, and
amount of tax bills ready for trans
fer to individual statements.
The machine, an item of the as
sessor's office budget last s u m-
mer. cost about $11,000. Three
girls are being trained to operate
the machine, but only one girl at
a time is sequired to operate it
The others would be free for other
work.
iutCitfWtr-1 I MoiN
ft odwttion
"fnds Tonita"
MIRACLE
99
hA A3 ULANOVA
f,W " I i i t V filmtd in landon in Eatlmon colt
Anti-Poll Tax
em now.
er governors to Jill vacancies in
the U.S. House ot Representative!
if more than half the members
should be killed in an atomic at.
lack or other disasler.
Holland has listed 67 senators
including Democratic Leader Lynl
don B. Johnson of Texas and R.
publican Leader Everett M. Dirk.
sen of Illinois, as co-sponsors b(
his amendment.
But it is opposed both by son
Southern senators wno contend
that it would undermine slates'
rights and also by a bipartisan
group of Northern Senators who
contend that only an act of Con.
gress is necessary to wipe out (hi
poll lax.
Sen. Jacob K. Javits (R-NY)
spearheading the efforts of this
latter group, has offered an ami.
poll tax bill that he plans lo offer
as a substitute for Holland's con.
titulional amendment.
Talmadge introduced Thursday
a revised version of the constitu
tional amendment he first oflered
last year. It is designed to over.
come the 1954 Supreme Court de
cision declaring racially segregat.
ed schools unconstitutional.
Under it, the operation of
schools on a segregated or non-
segregated basis would be left to
the decision of each slate.
An aide lo Talmadge said the
senator is prepared to try to tack
his constitutional amendment onto
the others and, in case Javits'
anti-poll tax bill is approved, prob
ably will offer it as a subslitue.
Johnson, in supporting Holland's
amendment, told the Senate he
had long felt that "this was Ihe
proper procedure for doing away
with the poll tax as a requirement
for voting."
OPEN TONITE t-AS P.M.
ends Saturday
Opens Sot. & Sun. 12:45
EDGE of
J. ' if-e-nViiTa
CUmin COLOR
Feature Times:
Fri. 7:00 & 10:05
1:00-4:00-7:05 & 10:05
Sot.
BATTLE OF the
CORAL SEA
Feoture, Timei;
Fri. ot 8:40 Only .
Sot. 2:35 - 5:35 & 8 40
"AL CAPONE"
and
"LITTLE CAESAR
in the most fabulous
robbery that ever
rocked Monte Carlo!
MM
mm
Plui . AFRICAN ADVENTURE
-7Tf wm.
B-Ha
a