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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 16, 1959)
PAGE TWO HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON FRIDAY, JANUARY IB, mi "DENNIS THE MENACE" I J WWW iih )bl TEU. A1E TO GO OUT. . . tftf. WlSOKj TEU.S M TO St? IN....K7EaMETO (30 OUT.... All?. WILSON TfcaS. Former Employe Of Queen Says Liz 'Penny Pincher' LONDON (UPD-Atlorneys for Queen Elizabeth may go inlo open court to contest the right of former emnloye to disclose gossi py little tidbits about the royal family s intimate private life, was reported today. The High Court of Justice al ready has issued a temporary re straining order to prevent publica tion of further articles in a news paper series by William Ellis, 50 former superintendent of Windsor Castle. By going into open court to make the injunction permanent the at tnrneys would be able to give maximum publicity to the royal family s indignntion about person al items already published and prevent publication uf further family secrets. , tins alter nine years service REAUY 6000 Is!? resigned his post in 1!)57 following a dispute over the 'sale of some chairs with the royal seal on them. Before leaving he signed a written promise not to give out any information on his life at Windsor Castle, the attorneys said. Ellis, now a pub keeper, wrote the first of his scries Sunday in Ihe Sunday Pictorial, a tabloid newspaper. The Pictorial promised that in future chapters Ellis would write about Ihe romance of Princess Margaret and Group Capt. Peter lownscnd. One item that may have aroused royal displeasure was the asscr- lion that the queen, with a huge private fortune, was penny-pinch ing. 'I slood by the side of Ihe queen as she flicked through a bundle of low-priced gay chintz curtain pattern s," he wrote. 'When Ihe queen saw the price labels she said regretfully, 'these really are lovely materials, Mr. Ellis, but I am afraid they are much too expensive for me. We shall just have to find something cheaper. I had every sympathy for their economy drive. Perhaps that is why the pay has always been and still is very poor in the royal household. In another recollection Ellis said that after the duke and queen left Clarence House in London much of their furniture was sent to Windsor Castle. This included a bed which I discovered had been put in the late kings silting room, Ellis wrote. "I asked the duke where he wanted the bed He chuckled: 'You don't think I'm sleeping in this do you?' He pointed to the queens room and said, lhal where'I sleep.' " President Ready To Use Veto Power WASHINGTON (API President Eisenhower today was reported ready to make forceful use of his veto power if necessary to main tain the scant surplus in the 77- billion-dollar budget he will send to Congress Monday. The message lor fiscal 10. which starts July 1, is expected to urge bipartisan support tor an anti-inllationary squeeze on fed eral spending and closing of tax loopholes. Eisenhowers target, ' adminis tration sources have hinted, is to cut outlays to a level slightly above 77 billion dollars. It is hoped that revenues will exceed that amount, although the margin may be only 100 million dollars or less. There will also be some bad fiscal news in the message, offi cials conceded a slightly higher deficit than was anticipated for the current budget year. Spending this year is expected to mount fairly close to 81 billion dollars, instead of the $79,200,000, 000 estimated officially in Septem ber. Much of the increase is at tributed to the proposed $1,400.- 000,000 increase in this country's subscription to the International Monetary Fund, which Eisen hower recommended last week. Revenues will have risen to more than 68 billion dollars in stead of Ihe 67 billion oliicially predicted. But when the govern ment year ends next June 30 the deficit reportedly will exceed by several hundred million dollars the earlier estimate of $12,200,-000.000. Officials said mounting concern over the depreciation of the dol lar, coupled with concern lest this country eventually price itself out of world markets, has reinforced Ihe administration's decision to make a strong stand against def icit financing. Administration aides suggested Eisenhower will use the carrot- and-club technique to win cooper ation from the Democratic Con gress. He dangled the carrot in his State of the Union message the hope that some lax relief may be possible in fiscal 1961 if the budget line is held in I960. The White House was represent ed as believing it will have sup port in the economy campaign from the leadership of both par ties in Congress. The two Texas Democrats, Senate Majority Leader Lyndon Johnson and House Speaker Sam Rayburn fre quently have taken a conservative line on fiscal issues when some of their fellow party members have been urging new spending programs. The club which Eisenhower Red's Tour Of America Termed Soviet Success 3 Children Die In Fire PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) - While their mother lay critically ill in a hospital here, Ihree Indian chil dren burned to death on the Co copah Indian Reservation Thurs day night. Hospital authorities arc trying to keep news from pretty Mrs. Elaine Jim, 23. In a two-month battle against cancer she has con stantly said, "I want to live for my children." Her children Sherrill, 5'4, Frederick, 3, and Alfred Jr., 19 months were trapped when flames engulfed the adobe home of their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Pedro Jim. The grandpar ents escaped. Deputy O. D. Jones of Yuma County said children were left with the grandparents when Mrs. Jim was taken to the hospital. The father received word of the deaths in the Phoenix city jail where he had been serving a sen tence for being drunk. Lawmen arranged for his release. , ACE TV TIPS J What is this "PRINTED CIRCUIT" vou hear about used in TV sets? AND, how GOOD is it for TV sets? Briefly, it is a method of mass producing a complicated wiring circuit by etching a con ductive metal pattern on a thin sheet of in sulating board. In TV sets this has two big advantages, it saves the manufacturer lots of time and money. It's fast and cheap. In the January issue of Rodio-Electronics, page 114, it reads that servicemen in general are aqainst the use of printed circuits in TV, and we agree, wholeheartedly. We have repaired many defective printed circuits with standard TV hook-up wire, but as vet have never repaired or replaced a regular wired TV with parts from a printed circuit. Are we getting thru? Besides the hairline cracks which develop in a printed circuit causing odd TV troubles, trying to test and check the resistors, condensers, etc., soldered into the board, makes an easy job very difficult. And the customer of course foots the bill. ZENITH refuses to lower quality, performance and reliability by the use of 'the printed cir , cuit, and therefore does not use it, and we love them for that. If you are planning to buy a TV set, get TV performance figures from the December and January issues of CONSUMERS REPORTS at , vour news stand. Let testing experts give you the REAL low-down on Who's-Who in TV. O We have over a dozen new Zenith models in stock to choose from, come in let us SHOW you the difference. O Quality service at reasonable rotes is our by word for all TV ond Radio type work. Try us, you'll buv us. FREE PICK-UP AND DELIVERY IN THE KLAMATH FALLS AREA ACE TV 1140 Riverside Drive Ph. TU 4-3581 Heuri? K Mob. thru Sot. Autheriittf Salt! mi Service Legislators Aid Montana Youth HELENA, Mont. (API A lost billfold prompted state representa tives to dig into their pockets Thursday. The billfold containing $45 was dropped by page boy John Dahl 14, of Helena, apparently while operating the House elevator. The ninth grader reported his loss. He later was called to the rostrum and given an envelope containing $45, donated by the leg islators. Motorists Pay For Accidents SALEM AP) - Traffic acci dents cost Oregon motorists 60 million dollars last year, the state Department of Motor Ve hicles said Thursday. The estimate was four million lower than the 1957 estimate. The commission said Oregon's death rate reached a 1958 Irish in November, with 8.2 persons killed per 100 million miles of travel. The death rale for the first 10 months of the year was 5 7. The figure for November 1957 was 10.9. BURGLARS NABRED CULVER CITY. Calif. (AP) - A motel owner didn'l like what he found in one of his rooms and called police. Officers saw three rabbits un der a bed, a cal asleep in a chair, a large tank of goldfish, several parakeets, pigeons and lizards. They arrested Milton Heron, 23, and Carol Lee Jenks, 18. on a charge of burglarizing pet shops. WASHINGTON (AP) - The transcontinental tour of Anastas I. Mikoyan apparently has been a great success from the Soviet point of view. That was Ihe assessment given by State Department officials to day as the Soviet deputy premier returned to Washington after vis its to Cleveland, Detroit, Chicago, San Francisco, Los Angeles and New York. Any assessment of the actual value of Mikoyan's visit in terms or easing tensions or solving cold war problems affecting the Unit ed States and the Soviet Union must await the outcome of talks he has arranged today- with Sec retary of State Dulles and Satur day with President Eisenhower There was a noticeable lack of optimism on those points. But State Department officials credited Mikoyan with making a very favorable impression in many areas with his appeals for peace and trade and his show of frankness on occasion in admitting that the Soviet Union' has made mistakes in its relations with the United States in the past. There was only one point on which they thought Mikoyan oc casionally showed sensitivity the Soviet suppression of the anti Communist revolt in Hungary in 1956. He sought to defend it by comparing it with U.S. interven tion to protect the government of Lebanon last year. Hungarian pickets everywhere Mikoyan went focused fresn attention on me is sue. Mikovan apparently sought on Recreation Bill Offered WASHINGTON iAP) Rep. Al Tillman (D-Ore) wants the feder al government to keep a keen eve out for recreational facilities. Ullman said so Thursday in a new but he introduced in tne House. " The Baker congressman said his bill would require such facili ties in all future federal flood con trol and reclamation projects. And Ullman added: VAmerieans have long taken an abundance of recreational facili ties for granted. "But with a steadily increasing population and .rapidly expanding industrial development, we may soon find ourselves lacking ade quate hunting, fishing and camp ing acuities. his tour to reduce tensions be tween the world's two greatest powers by trying to persuade Americans that under Premier Khrushchev the Soviet Union is run by reasonable men. He tried to convince those with whom he talked that it is possible for this country to make practical deals and engage in profitable trade with tne Soviet Union. But in his public and private meetings Mikoyan has provided no real evidence of Soviet will mgiiess to mane concessions in order to solve the long Soviet- Western deadlock over Germanv. He has created in some quarters, however, the impression that Khrushchev does not wish to press me dispute over Berlin to a dan gerous point. The principal points which Mi. koyan has made are these: 1. The six months limitation which the Soviet Union imposed two months ago for withdrawal of Western troops from Berlin was not intended as an ultimatum and the time limit is flexible. If the United States does not like Khrushchev's proposal to make West Berlin into a "free city" it should offer counter proposals 2. the Soviet government wants a high level East-West meeting on Germany and probably other is-i sues, and the sooner the better. 3. The Soviet government will insist on having a veto voting svs- tem in any council which might be set up to operate an inspec tion system for a ban on nuclear weapons testing. 4. The Soviet Union wants to trade with the United States but U.S. government regulations arc preventing American businessmen Irom selling what it wants to buy. 5. the soviet Union must be treated as an equal by the United States. Some authorities consider this to Tie a kind of appeal for direct negotiations between Mos cow and Washington on many is sues now negotiated with several Western powers at once. She'll Remember January 15 SAN ANTONIO, TcX. (AP) - Mrs. Adolph Stroter, 22, says she will not soon forget Jan. 15. Her husband. 33. was placed in County Jail that day for violating parole from State Prison. Less than 3 hours later, her two-year- old son, Kurt, fell from the family car and was critically injured. The ambulance rushing the crit ically injured child to a hospital was involved in a traffic crash Mrs. Stroter and a friend, Mrs Judith Ann Haymaker, 17. were injured. So were the ambulance driver and his attendant. Scribe Pays Fine For Disturbance LOS ANGELES (API Novelist Thomas T. Chamales has paid a $150 fine for disturbing the peace, a charge that stemmed from an argument with his now. estranged wife, singer Helen O'Connell. Chamales was placed on proba tion Thursday for two years. He and Miss O'Connell separated aft er the argument last Nov. 17. She has a separate maintenance suit on file. Navy Helps Woman Clerk; Expunges Blot On Record NEW YORK (AP) - A woman clerk at a service hospital has ruhhed a little lustre off some high Navy brass. Miss Anna Wasylkow. 39. is a civilian clerk-stenographer at the St. Albans Naval Hospital in Queens. Last July 31 around 4:30 p.m. official closing time Ihe telephone rang. She answered it. It was a requisition request and she left a memo for the prop er authority. A lew days later a superior de manded to know why she an swered the telephone while 'off duty." Miss Wasylkow said she didn't remember whether it was a minute before 4:30 or a minutr or two after. But since she was there, she said, she considered 't OSBORN HOTEL EIK.KNE ORE . i Itrlt J tirrt It Thnrtinihly Mnden proper to answer the phone. Came the olficial reprimand "You are hereby officially warned for failure to carry out instruc tions on July 31, 1958. A repetition of this offense within one voir may result in applications of high cr penalties." ' Miss Wasylkow was burned up She filed an appeal. It was denied She was told she was "guilty of insubordination." She got a law yer. Samuel Resnicoff Miss Wasylkow, who resides in Floral Park. N Y'., has worked at the hospital for 14 years. She has had one promotion. The repri mand was a blot on her record and a blow lo her sense of justice. -Resnicolf filed a brief with Sec retary of the Navy Gates. In part it said "answering the telephon" is an automatic reflex" and that Ihe punishment "borders on sheer tolderol." Thursday the Navy spiked som j body's guns. The order came through to expunge the repri mand from Miss Wasylkow's rec lord. i holds is the veto power. The President is prepared, aides said, :o take a stiffer attitude than in the past in rejecting legislation which in his opinion would com mit the government to excessive spending. With the greatly increased Dem ocratic strength in Congress, the possibilities have increased that vetoes might be overridden. But the White House has disclosed that the President plans to appeal for public support in a series of tele vision chats. Eisenhower has not yet used the veto as liberally as did former President Harry S. Truman, but he wielded it effectively against several anti-recession spending proposals in the last session. He vetoed the omnibus housing bill, the farm price support freeze, a I'j minon dollar rivers and har bors bill, and a 279 million dollar measure to assist chronically de pressed cities and areas. None of his vetoes has been overriden. In his State of the Union mes sage last week Eisenhower asked Congress to give him the power oi "item veto the right to re ject specific portions of appropria tion bills -and approve others. Over many decades Congress has refused steadfastly to part with any of its power over the national purse strings, and ad ministration officials say they do not really expect to get the item veto now. But Ihe mere mention of the President's veto power was a reminder to Congress that he has that weapon very much in mind. I, $i2a'J I,.. ,J j. Actor To Retain Four Children LOS ANGELES (AP) - Actor Sterling Hayden will retain cus tody of his four children but he can t take them on a world cruise. The court's, rulings Thursday ended a bitter custody fight be tween the actor and his divorced wife, Betty Ann DeNoon. Superior Judge Emil Gampert ruled Mrs. Hayden, 36, is not a fit person to have custody, but held the children are too young they range Irom 10 to 6 lo sail around the world in their father's ancient yacht. TOO MUCH TOO OFTEN LOS ANGELES (AP), Fifteen separations in two years of mar riage are ridiculous, says actress Mara Corday. She said Thursday she will sue actor-director Richard Long for divorce. They were married Jan. 26, 1957, in Las Vegas. Miss Corday said both have been consulting a psychiatrist. MRS. CARL YANCEY recently resigned after nearly nihs yean' service as deputy of the Klamath County Grenge.JJ She is shown turning over the deputy sash to Lawrence . Barleen, member and former master of Shasta View': Grange, who has been appointed to succeed her. Mrs. Yancey, who was appointed to the deputy position by -i State Master Elmer McClure In 1950, will continue to " servo as treasurer of the state grange. Gunmen Shoot Storekeeper PORTLAND (AP) Two young masked gunmen Thursday nigh! twice shot a store keeper as they held up his small grocery store One bullet hit Thomas Michael Feeney in the abdomen. The other hit his hip. Heir Of Writer Left One Dollar LOS ANGELES (AP) - Writer Octavus Roy Cohen, 67, who died Jan. 6, left only $1 to his son, Ocatvus Jr., of East Orange, N.C. The bulk of his $50,000-plus es tate will go to a friend, Mrs. Mar garet M. Brigham. 57, of Los Angeles. His will, filed Thursday for probate, stipulated that Mrs. Brigham, a widow, use half the assets to provide $200 a month for his aunt, Miss Nina Ottolingui 80, of Asheville, N.C. Cohen said he had made a sin cere effort during his lifetime to provide for his son. CONTINUOUS SHOWS SAT. . SUN. and Holidays From 12:45 Doors Open TONITE 6:30 STARTS TONITE! HES EViN LAUGH I ER THAN NO TIME FOR SERGEANTS ! k 'IN Am Nation's. V!xZ f4Mj newNo.l V Yi funnyman f J"?"- V X isgoofin' J J- &a&H& I up the ' jri (t?-it I -Coast Guard 4 4 ANDY - VdsjtV 7 GRIFFITH . FELICIA tijfwl farr . ipm illER MAIM ERIN 06RIEN Sj7Pk JOE MANTELL MVS, 9:30 Sot. 1 Sun. it 12:55 3:07 . 5:14 . 7:24 . t:3S Feervft Tonft At 7:1 S The 52-year-old Feeney was re-' ported in fair condition at Good Samaritan Hospital here. Feeney told police that ths. youths walked into his store and said: "This is a stickup." "I thought it was a couple of kids from the neighborhood pulU' ing a prank," said Feeney. "The gun was so small." After Feeney resisted and was shot, the youths fled with his wallet. DOORS OPEN 6:30 RM. ENDS SATURDAY! DOORS OPEN U:5 P.M. jmn JTMtl Mom THl aunt Iawoh FEATURE TIMES; FRI. 7:00 10:15 SAT. - 3:10-6:40 I 10:05 ANP- Sim rrtf3Lr rami iusr- f I- . X In WAHNIWCOLO kROBIN hughes FEATURE TIMES: FRI. - 9:00 ONLY " SAT. . 1:45-5:20 1 8:4S KIDDIE SHOW! Doort Open 9:30 A.M. Bring 2 Bread Wrappers 'Beware of the Red Witch" And 2 Cartoons Out At 12 Noon SUNDAY! JIM MARY VlCTOK DAVIS CASTLE JORY -PLU5- iMifrinCNi WEAPON COCHRAN -SCCn- MJUtSWU.- NUIifld -tcWeapcn