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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 23, 1959)
MOB WO HERALD ANT) NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON FRIDAY. .TANTARY 23. lSSt? Patronage - Hungry GOP Gets Pledge From Alcorn DES MOINES. Iowa (APi-Pa-tronage-hungry Republicans had a pledge from GOP National Chair man Meade Alcorn today that par ly officials will have a hand in filling 100.000 census-laker jobs. With the Republican National Committee indicating approval of an ambitious program to sell its candidates to the voters in MSO. Alcorn moved to chiirk up some of the cracks in party harmony. One of those has been the Eisen hower administration's reputed failure to consult with members of Congress and local officials in handing out federal jobs. Another NOW PLAYING! i OPEN TONITE 4:30 P.M. Continuous Shows Saturday ond Sunday from 12:45 P.M. In One Great Blaze Of Action... ...A boy voteama X &t4J$r bteame. h,r' ' Anl Cuiitr I S becama a WALT DISNEY'S mm Tin UniiM ifwy hind ttw Wnli 1 its 051 1 Mitntuitl TECHNICOLOR SAL MINEO IN t IUIIIIM1 111 01 10111 OU ii mrm ... " CAREY-CAMPOS mci mm- wihm FEATURE TIMES: Fri. 7:40 I 10:00 Sot. 1:00-3:20-6:40-8:03 I 10:25 . And 2 Spoclol Fevturertett KIDDIE MATINEE!!! SAT. MORN. 9:30 A.M. Jusr kring 2 (rood Wrappers "Oklahoma AnnJo" 3 CARTOONS Slant :3S . OUT AT NOON lias been Alcorn's failure to check with congressional leaders on 10 campaign plans. John B. Martin Jr., Michigan national committeeman, brought the patronage matter out into the open with the observation that he liad been informed the Common i Department will hire 100,000 per sons in its 10 census operation. .Martin said he wants to be sure deserving Republicans share lib erally in this windfall, which he said would provide employment lur several months at pay rang ing up to iVKt a month. Alcorn replied that this matter "is well in hand. He said he had conlerred with Secretary of Com merce Strauss and other high ad ministration oflicials and had been assured that the patronaft is going to be available through local Republican channels. Alcorn lacked any immediate solution, however, of an issue raised by Mrs. Katherine Kennedy Brown, Ohio committcewoman She contended that Republicans in Congress had not been consult ed in advance about the long range program the chairman laid before the National Committee Thursday. Alcorn replied sharply that he had drawn up the program at the President's request. He said he had submitted it to Eisenhower as a confidential memo' and had not cleared it with anyone. Among other things, Alcorn pro posed that the Republicans set up a survey committee to recom mend in three months a statement of party Intentions on major is sues. Some Republicans said they regard this as paralleling the Democratic Advisory Council which has been at odds oftert with the Democratic leaders in Con gross. The fact that he and other GOP leaders in Congress had not been asked for their views before At corn laid down his program to the national committee was said to have contributed to the critical blast fired at President Eisenhow er Thursday by Rep. Richard Simpson IH-Pai. ' Simpson, head of the Republi can Congressional Cam paign Committee, won vigorous applause when he proposed that Eisenhower devote to the party some of the "unremitting effort toward year-aiound campaigning the President called for from Re publican workers. . CONFERENCE HELD McALLEN. Tex. (API Six Cubans who fled their country alt er the collapses of the Batista re gime conferred with lawyers Thursday, a border patrol spokes man said. They include Sen. Rolando Mas- ferrer Roias. his two brothers, a naval olficer nnd two servants All are held at the immigration detention center here. A spokesman said he had no idea when and where a hearing will be held for 'the group who have been held here since Jan. 15. Dulles Seeks New Reunification Ideas A SURPRISE LUNCHEON at Luccas' Cafe, honoring Lee Hendricks who recently sold Lee Hendricks Drug Store on South Sixth Street to Frank Broderick, was arranged by 15 fellow businessmen of the South Sixth Street area Wednesday noon. Shown examin ing . the world globe which was the surprise gift to Hendricks are, from left, Dean Hall, Ben Adair, seated, Hendricks and Bill Davis. Hendricks established his drug store busi ness on South Sixth in 1939. Davis came in 1940, Hall in 1929, and Adair'ln 1946. Hendricks is not retiring, but has arranged to work as a pharmacist on a part time basis for his successor at the drug store. The 16 businessmen at the luncheon represented a total of 322 years of business in that area. Hospital Superintendent Unsatisfied With Budget SALEM (API - Dr. Russell Guiss, superintendent of Dam- masch State Hospital now being built at WiLsonville, told a Ways and Means Subcommittee Thurs day he was not entirely satisfied with the proposed operating bud get (or his hospital. Guiss told the subcommittee the one million dollar budget for the next biennium could keep the hos pital from opening at its intended capacity of 400 patients. A bud get that small, he said, might de lay its opening. He had requested $1,3(10,000. He told the-committee he might get along with $1,100,000. Guiss said his biggest problem is getting a stalf for the new hos pital, scheduled to open in Janu ary, 1961. He said he needed the addition al funds to hire a righly trained staff in advance, and 'start a pi lot program at the Oregon State Hospital here. The pilot program would train the staff to be sent to Dammasch. He added that the reduced bud get will delay hiring. "We don't come by these people easily." he said. "You can't find doctors to start on the day the doors open. He said the lower budget could delay the admission rate. "I have a feeling Portland people will be unhappy if their relatives are sent to Salem when they could have gone to the new hospital, the doctor remarked lie added that he wants "to open as quickly as we can and run a highly accredited hospital He said the hospital might be completed before the. scheduled opening date. "DENNIS THE MENACE" Crima Shows Salurrloy and Sundoy From 12:4j 1 1 f H II U i I - I l opi 1 1L7 1 OPENS TONITE 30 LAST TIME SATURDAY! BIG BOOK! 616 CAST! 1 BIG PICTURE! Starting SUNDAY! SKNcaTMcy ! THE LAST HURRAH THE SHERIFF OF FRACTURED JAW is a very funny picture made only for people who iike to laugh! A mild mannered Englishman wakes up as the sheriff of ' ' thn WmI's wiIHmI tnmnl . Movie Mogul Rites Slated By JAMES BACON AP Motion Picture Writer HOLLYWOOD (API Cecil B. De Mille, a master of pomp in life, will be buried today with simplicity. The brief rites at St. Stephens Episcopal Church will contain no eulogy, little organ music. But television coverage and an expected big crowd outside the church will undoubtedly add what movie people call 'The De Mille spectacle touch. One of his doctors told a re porter that the 77-year-old movie pioneer, who died Wednesday, would be alive today had he been an obedient patient. "When he went to New Orleans a few weeks ago to promote a movie," the doctor said, "I for bade him and told him bluntly 'This trip will kill you. Don't go.' ' But De Mille answered: " must go." Alter the New Orleans premiere of "The Buccaneer" De Mille went to New York and other cities to plug the picture. Victim of three heart' attacks in recent years, he returned from the tour exhausted His doctors finally got him to bed only a week ago. "He needed at least six months of solid rest, the doctor said 'But he hadn't been in bed two days when lie cot up one day and went to his office at Paramount When I rebuked him, he said he went only to the barbershop. He was mischievous about it like a little boy. WASHINGTON' (API Secretary of State Dulles has urged U.S. allies, particularly West Germany, to produce some basic new ideas on German reunification for pos sible proposal to the Soviet Union. Reporting this Friday, inform ants said that Dulles and his ad visers are particularly interested in the possibility that a plan might be devised for a German confed eration. They are looking for some plan which would oiler a construc tive, fresh approach to reuniting Germany and on which the Soviet government might be willing to; negotiate. In the U.S. view any confeder ation plan would have to provide at least for a central government! with control over such matters as' foreign policy. .Moscow proposed ccnfederation in a Jan. 10 note but indicated it would be little1 more than a facade for continuing Vi est Germany and Communist i East Germany as completely in-! dependent states. i The German problem is being attacked on three fronts in the biggest review since l'J55 of where the West stands on this whole crucial matter: 1. The most immediate problem ! is to prepare a reply to the Soviet; Jan. 10 note, which calls for aj 28-nalion peace conference In March to write a German peace treaty. A peace treaty draft.-which the Western governments branded as unacceptable, was offered at the same time. There js a possi bility that the West may suggest a different set of peace treaty principles. But the probability is that the Western powers will call lor a Big Four meeting of foreign ministers or deputy foreign min isters by early May to discuss the whole German problem. 2. Related to the problem of a reply is the more fundamental question of how the Western pow ers can seize the initiative with constructive proposals if they get into formal talks with the Soviet government on German issues. The United States, Britain, France and the German Federal Republic are forming a working group of State Department and embassy officials which will begin active work on the possibilities early next month. 3. Behind the policy review is the danger of a new Berlin crisis developing in May. This will result it Premier Nikita Khrushchev goes through with his plan to turn over to East Germany Soviet occupation authority in East Ber lin and over the communications lines between West Germany and West Berlin.- - If the lines are interrupted, Uie question will arise immediately how the Western powers intend to supply their troops and, if neces sary, feed the 2.2OO.0OO people Uv ing in West Berlin. VVVaSi! 2 DAT Service " AXSTOI BKII UM KKTAfHHOMB twtm tOt MAW IT -4 TO MM 4 COUNT! V REAUV From the Bargain Basement MAYTAG WRINGER WASHER 47.77 G.E. RANGE Good lor Summer SOHf Cabin I' ZENITH REFRIGERATOR Small Apartment $37 Siia J' WESTINGHOUSE AUTOMATIC WASHER , s87" asuarontecd BENDIX DRYER Excellent $0788 Condition " WESTINGHOUSE TV 24" Screen Q777 Guaranteed EASY SPIN DRY WASHER Guaranteed $5777 NORGE REFRIGERATOR Runs Good s2777 PHILCO REFRIGERATOR Guaranteed s8777 HAMILTON DRYER Now Healing $1777 Element G.E. TV 21" Table S Model 77 77 17" G.E. PORTABLE TY 1958 Model $14777 New Guarantee "7 APPLIANCE CO. Corner of 10th and Main TU 4-8183 Tujust CH4?E WMfwmm sacs sets for pressims; More A-Subs Requested WASHINGTON I API Sen. Henry M. Jackson D-Vash said today he will urge Consress to authorize m lit r- i KENNETH MORE MANSFIELD I A 0m i Mayor Of Tampa Offers Felon Aid TAMPA, Fla. (API - Mayor Nick Nuccio may hue a man who threatened lo blow up his home nearly three years ago. Nuccio said Joseph Francois Drapeau. 48, came to his ollice Thursday to apoloKize tor his $5,-ono-homb lhre.it extortion attempt in 1:I3S. The mayor said Drapeau, who was released from a federal prison this week, then asked him for a clerical ioh with tne city. "He really felt sorry for what he had done.'' Nuccio said. "If it's possible lor me to help him. I'm uomu to be happy to do it. Drapeau pleaded guilty to the extortion charge in l!i.i6 and was sentenced to 2'j years. OSC Dormitory To Chang? Hands si ill more nuclear-powered missile suhmannes for the Navy this year. Jackson led a successful drive last year to authorize four of the vessels, which are designed to launch Polaris Intermediate Range Ballistic Missiles either Irom the surface or from under the water. He said in an interview that he will ask congressional approval "of several additional Polaris units " "This will require an upward ad justment of defense funds." he added. At Jackson's urging. Congress lasi year added 638 million dollars to defense appropriations for the four additional submarines, which raised the total authorized to nine. Funds for one of the four have been released, but President Ei senhower indicated in his budget message the other three will not be built before 1960. He said his budget provided only for those parts for the three submarines which would require a long time to produce. CORVALLIS i p Oregon Slate's famous old Waldo Halt where some 12. mm women college students have livid in the past in years will become a men's dor mitory this tall The change is part of a long ratKc program lo fit college fa cilities to student requirements. The program ha been undi r way for some time and for the past lew months some of the men and wumt'ii students have been dining together in a central calelena Asked if they approv ed of mixed dining. 97 per cent o( the men answer yes. Only t4 per cent ot the women approved. Our Best To Drive-In Cleaners sttio' Plaza Cleaners 1029 S.W. Montgomery Portlone, Oregon EAST SIDE PHARMACY PRESENTS Heart-winning gifts for your Valentine are found right here at East Side Pharmacy Shop now. Be ready when it's time to say, "Be My Valentine." FOR HE31X She'll love these gifts: you for JEWELRY PURSES TOILET SETS TOILET WATERS CAMERAS MANICURE SETS PERFUME BILLFOLDS LIGHTERS. 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