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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 13, 1959)
HERALD AND NEWS. Klamath Fall. Or. Thursday, August 13. 1!IS9 PAGE ftA V f d'mr- '1 aw THE SILVER BOWL By Donald J. Sobol "I can't b certain from a photo graph, but that looks like the gun man," said Fitzpatrick. "Mugsy Cole," said Inspector Winters, glancing at the police al bum. "Two convictions (or armed robbery. You say Cole entered the store just as it opened for the day?" "That's right," replied Fitzpat rick. "1 had my hack to the door when 1 heard him enter. 'Don't turn around,' he commanded. Tve got a gun. and I'll use it if I have to!' " "Then what happened?" "I did exactly as he told me. I passed all the silver from the wall showcase and laid it on the coun ter. I guess he put it into the bag I saw him carrying when he raced out the door." -"You saw his back," said Haled Jian. "Did you ever see his face?" . "No. He made me pass each piece of silverware to him behind hiy back." "Yet you claim lo know what be looks like," interposed the in sped or. ; Fitzpatrick stiffened- I saw his reflection. W we keep the silver highly polished. As I passed him a large fruit bowl, I could see his Image rellected on the inside of II." "I saw him only for a few sec ends. Maybe it wasn't Cole" "You seemed to be fairly cer tain a minute ago," snapped the in spector. "Did you see the gun in the Office Of Virginia Solon Getting A Mite Crowded reflection?" Haledjian put in. "Come to think of it, 1 didn't," admitted Fitzpatrick. 'You didn't see Cole, either. 1 suggest you return the silver you stole rather than continue this farce," admonished Haledjian. It will go easier with you." What was Fitzpatrick's blunder? he "Don't turn commanded. around," , 'uMop apisdn saSeuii spaijaj MOq b jo apisut anj. 'oq pausiiod B JO apisu; sqi uo Xjaijq pa)3ajJ attain; u jo siseq aq) uo asa auoXus jo ubui -unit b jo uoiinaijiiuapi us apeui 3ABU, jaAau pinoo )(3U)cdzi!j (Copyright, 1 959, by Donold J. Sobol) Solons Hope To Adjourn Before Khrushchev Arrives . WASHINGTON (AP) - The Eisenhower administration ap parently will be happy if Congress goes home before Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev comes to town. .' That is the definite impression Vice President .Richard M. Nixon has obtained from his Capitol Hill essociates. Many members of Con gress have let it be known they hope Congress will have finished its work before Khrushchev ar rives Sept. 15. The adjournment date still is un certain. - Nixon and other administration leaders apparently believe that if legislators have returned to their homes, blasts by individual mem bers will be less likely to draw national attention. A concentration fcould create embarrassing inci dents while Khrushchev is- in Washington and touring the coun try at President Eisenhower's in vitation. WASHINGTON IAP) Young sters may soon be hanging from the chandeliers in the office of bachelor representative Ken Hech- ler iD-WVai. Girls from Wellesley and Steph ens College, from Cornell Univer sity and Washington's Western High School, and boys from Swarthmore, Williams College and the University of North Carolina are getting in the way of juniors from West Virginia's fourth Con gressional District high schools. They're even crowding Hechler out of his private office, hut he isn't complaining because it was his idea. Hechlcr's two - room business suite in the old House Office Build ing is doubling as a school for practical politics. The 14 people now occupying Hechler's offices share desks, ta b!cs, typewriters and what Hechler wistfully calls his private office. The unpaid students perform such jobs as typing, filing cor respondence, preparing press re leases, clipping newspapers, greet ing visitors, guiding sightseeing tours, conducting research, and advising the boss on legislation. Most of them are "interns" who come to Washington in organized and supervised groups to see what makes their government tick. They stay from a week to several months. -- The one-week "interns" are stu dents who have won contests sponsored by Hechler in the high chools of his district. A new boy and a new girl arrive each week. All are juniors, the idea being to put to good use m their senior year the knowledge gained in Hechlcr's office. Hechler pays their train fare both ways, provides free housing. usually with a West Virginia fami ly living in the Washington area, and gives them S;n for food and incidentals. He estimates it costs him about $1 .200 every summer out of his own pocket. The day usually starts off at :30 a.m. with a staff meeting Ideas are exchanged and assign ments handed out. Hechler pre sides. The day ends around 5 p.m. It's not all work for the high school juniors, for they get some time off for guided visits to the House and Senate chambers, the Su preme Court and the Library of Congress. After 5 p.m., Hechler, -ts, a former professor of political science, is serving his first term in Congress. "These kids have plenty on the ball," he said. "They think things out and come up with sound and constructive suggestions. If they think I'm wrong on some legisla tion, they won't hesitate to tell me about if. They know the score." I . M . I .... , I : K r. . -'.in -7 .fAWV. S u 5 ", 'T' " ' Northwest Nudes Schedule Meet Near Eugene EUGENE nudists from Oregon, California Washington, Idaho and Canada. are expected to attend the Sixth Annual Sunshine Festival this weekend at the Willametans nud ist camp near here. A spokesman (gr Willametans. Lane County nudist group, said the festival will have a Centennial theme. Saturday activities will include a get-acquainted hour, horseshoes, hadminton. volley hall, children's races, a ham dinner, and ama teur entertainment. The festival will conclude Sun day with church services, selec tion of a "Mr. and Mrs. Willamc tan" i chosen on the basis of the best sunlani, and the naming of a Miss Sunbeam or Mr. Sunray (junior prince or princess). FIESTA McCLOUD Work crews are re conditioning the miniature railroad, and rolling stock. They are ready, ing it for the McCloud Lumber More than ISO jack Fiesta August 2-30. One oC the most popular of all fiesta at tractions, the equipment will ba in excellent condition for the cele bration. Allan Carter, committee man said. Three trophies and spe cial award ribbons will be given to winners at the gem and min eral exhibit. Special awards will be presented for winning flower exhibits. Eugene Mason, last year's aquacade director, is as sisting Judy Nelson in directing a larger and more spectacular aqua cade program. Chas. J. Cizek TAILOR Suits t Sleeks Mede to Order Perfect Fit Guaranteed 119 SOUTH 7th F. W. RALSTON, 1726 Wiard Street, is shown examining a silver and ebony safety trophy at the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and Enginmen's 37th annual conven tion held recently in St. Paul, Minnesota. Ralston, Lodge No. 828 representative, was one of 940 delegates who gathered from all over the U.S. to discuss a program to defend end enhance the craft of locomotive firemen, according to H. E. Gilbert, International president of the 90-000-member rail union. . Miriam Luten. M.D. Announces the Establishment Of Ker Offices at Suite 306, Medical-Dental Bldg. Specializing in diseases of the Skin Bard Festival Said Success Post Given UO Graduate 1 TULELAKE Mr. and Mrs. Leon ard Meshke, Tulelake and Fort Klamath livestock ranchers, have received word of an honor for a on-in-law, William Fager. Mrs. Fager is the former Dorothy Mesh ke, Tulelake. Fager, who will receive his B.A, degree Friday, August 14, from the University of Oregon, has ac cepted a position with the General Electric Atomic Products, Hanford, Washington. He will remain for three years under a training pro- . eram starting in the chemical divi sion as an accountant in the busi ness administrative offices. '. General Electric is processing prospective candidates for posi tions, picked 100 from over the United States and one from the L'niversity of Oregon. Fager was the winning choice. . Mrs. Fager has taught music for four years, the last three in the city schools of Creswell. She has resigned from her fourth year con tract at Creswell to move to Rich land with her husband. I Mrs. Leonard Meshke will bring her 14-month-old grandson, Leon ard" Arthur Fager, home to the ranch at Fort Klamath when they return from Eugene. Meshke will assist the Fagers in their move to Washington. Meantime the verbal reactions to Khrushchev's forthcoming visit continued. Sen. Thomas H. Kuchel (R Calif), the assistant Senate Repub lican leader, said in an interview he thinks Americans "have been told quite enough times now to be courteous to Mr. Khrushchev." "Americans will be courteous," he said, "but we don't roll over and play dead for anybody. . . . We need not apologize for demonstrat ing, courteously of course, our hatred of enslaving peoples, by communism or otherwise." ben. 1 nomas J. Dodd (D-Conn) said in a prepared senate speech that while he does not object to a meeting between Eisenhower and Khrushchev "let there be no cheers for the Red dictator, no crowds assembled to greet, him, no flattery or flowers." Dood, who has announced he would move to adjourn the Senate if an effort were made to bring Khrushchev into the chamber, said he thinks "bringing Khrush chev to this country is a dreadful wrong." It is bound to hurt us and the causes we represent," he said. A proposal by Sen. Albert Gore (D-Tenh) that. Eisenhower intro duce Khrushchev for a speech to the Senate drew immediate oppo sition from Sen. Frank J. Lausche (D-Ohio). Lausche said nothing could be gained by anybody by having the Soviet leader reiterate his views. ; MAY SEEK POST . SILVERTON (AP) Silverton rancher R. F. Cook said Tuesday he may seek Republican nomina tion to the office now held by Sen. Sichard L. Neubergcr (D-Ore) Cook, who said he is conserva tive, made one previous attempt (or public office. He was defeat ed in the 1956 Republican primary when he tried to .unseat Rep. Walter Norblad (R-Ore) of the First Congressional District. Man Nabbed; Faces Felony DORRIS Robert Ward, former ly of Tennant and Dorris, was ar rested Saturday by Clarence Hous ton, assistant Dorris police chief, and held in Siskiyou County Jail to await authorities from Fresno where he was charged with a fel ony. The law also touched Mr. and Mrs, Edward L. Stallzop, Dorris, who appeared recently in Dorris Justice Court to plead guilty to writing checks with insufficient funds. Mrs. Stallzop admitted passing a worthless $20 check at the M & M Market. Stallzop pleaded guilty to passing a worthless $5 check at a local drugstore. Judge Lester Chase said he, con sidered the couple's four children and the fact that the Stallzops paid back the money in suspend ing SO of the 60 days he sentenced them to jail. Also appearing before Judge Chase was Henry Irving Tucker, Phoenix, Arizona, charged with drunkenness in and about an auto mobile. He was sentenced to pay $50 and to spend 10 days in the county jail. ASHLAND Critical comment and rising attendance mark 1959 as the Oregon Shakespearean Fes- tival's most successful season. ; Last weekend's capacity houses; pushed the total audience to 11,043 a lead of 2,413 over last year I at this time, and the earliest any season here has broken the 10,000 mark. On Saturday night, August 9, a full house watched "Antony and' Cleopatra" against the orange corona of a forest fire, raging out of control in the adjacent moun tains.. The fire, which blazed from the Rogue Valley floor up into the Siskiyou canyons, crested brilliant ly on the fir-lined ridge just be yond the theater. Since the audi ence was in no immediate danger, festival officials, in contact with the fire area decided to continue the performance. The fire was controlled the next day. Sunday's capacity audience for 'Twelfth Night" and "The Maske of the New World" continued to establish the combined bill as the year's most popular program 'Antony and Cleopatra" is run ning a close second in gate re ceipts. Following high critical praise for "King John" and 'Measure For Measure, both shows are climbing in audience totals, nearly doubling their first- round figures. General Manager William Pat- ton indicates that, despite the in creases, good seats remain for all performances, particularly for the final round, September 2 through September 5. Improvements In the bowl area have widened the choice in premium seats. Despite me $275,000 expenditure to build the organization's unique new Eliza bethan stage, ticket prices remain as before: $2.40, $1.80, and $1.20. Repertory for this year is Twelfth Night" and its Centennial prologue "Maske of the New World," "King John," "Measure For Measure," and "Antony and Cleopatra:" The shows rotate nightly in that order through Sep tember 5, allowing patrons to Stay Four Days See Four Plays." For tickets or information write: "Shakespeare," Ashland Oregon, Reservations may also be made at the festival's branch box offices. Branch office in the Klamath Falls area is the Derby Music Company. URGES PRAYER CRUSADE BOSTON (UPI) Richard Car dinal Cushing of Boston Tuesday night called for a "crusade prayer" while Soviet Premier Ni kita S. Khrushchev is m this coun try next month. Cardinal Cush ine said he would recommend that all the persons in his arch diocese pray for "the ruled and rulers of Russia, for nations bondage, for the sorrowful lan guishing in prisons and refugee camps for suffering people every where and lor universal peace LOOK! House Leveling and Concrete Foundations. 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