PAGE TWO
HERALD AND NEWS,
Klamath Falls.
Ore.
irffi-flff
Commerce Chamber Heads Hear New Tourist Plan
A proposed plan, which has been
designed to lengthen the stay .of
tourists within the state, was ((re
lented recently to the members
of the Oregon Chamber Execu
tives Fall Conference Program
Planning Committee and to the
members of the Oregon Chamber
Qp town :4S. Cwttimwwi
it. ft Sua. fnxw 12:41
Ends Saturday!
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Starting Sunday!
I IT CRACKED
THE WEST
I WIDE
OPEN I
ril THE GUNFIGHT
AT DODGE CITY
UOELMcCREA
BILL WILLIAMS NORA HA YDEN . ji TL ff I
Executive Board. ,
The points made in the plan in
cluded that Oregon's invitational
advertising through national maga
zines and newspapers is more ef
fective than the major competing
areas, and that there is an in
crease of tourists visiting the
state, leading to an increase in
income. However, these visitors
are staying within the state a
shorter period of time.
If all tourists seeing Oregon were
to remain one extra day, the com
bined revenue would be increased
by (35,000,000.
Proposals made to lengthen tou
rists' stays were that advertising
will suggest that they see more
of Oregon on fast, convenient highways.
Furthermore, it will be suggest
ed they contact the nearest cham
ber pf commerce upon entering
Oregon.
A folder will be offered to groups
holding conventions here, and
statement stuffers about Qregon
will be offered to out-of-state com
panies. .
Since the problem of persuad
ing tourists to stay longer is on
OPEN DAILY 7:00 P. M
ENDS TONIGHT!
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the local contact level, the follow
ing proposals were made:
Chambers will have meetings to
which influence groups will be in
vited. These groups will plan the
"35 Million for One Club" which
relates to the additional revenue
received if all tourists remained
one extra day in Oregon.
Membership in the club will be
by attendance at a Tourist Host
School.
There will also be a film for
presentation to groups on the tour
ist industry here, and the news
papers, radio stations and tele
vision stations will carry mate
rials on the same subject.
Chambers of commerce will also
receive cards with space provided
for the naming of local sites of
interest.
A bi-monthly or monthly news
bulletin possibly will be published
during seasons of tourist activity
within the state.
This entire proposal will be sub
mitted in the early fall to the
Travel Information Division Ad
visory Committee, and upon their
final approval, it will be presented
at the fall conference of the Ore
gon chamber executives.
"''eir&otMtgENACE'
CLEVELAND (AP) A police
man kept watch overnight after a
gang of boys Thursday nigrit
smashed windows in a house
bought by a Negro family in an
all-white neighborhood.
The purchaser, postal employe
Harry McCarthy, has not yet
moved into the house, which is
vacant.
The gang came by bicycles, and
resident of the area, Abbie
Bloom, said there were about 20
of them, 12 to 17 years old. Mrs.
Bloom who called police, thought
they came from another neighborhood.
The vandals smashed at least
eight windows. They pulled drapes
from a living room window onto
' I MUST K GROWN'! OlO V4 NOTICE
HE KEPT CAlUH'Ml 'MM'?'
Accusations Backwash Rumbles In Yake Of Bill
WASHINGTON W-A new back
wash of accusations rumbled to
day in the wake of House-passed
labor legislation. ,
Fighting mad were:
1. The AFL-CIO Executive Coun
cil. It charged in a resolution that
"the vole against labor last week
was part of a legislative package
deal between Southern Democrats
and Northern Republicans. Amer
ica must not tolerate such cynical
political maneuvering." ft claimed
there was a swap to pass strict
labor controls and kill off civil
rights legislation.
2. James B. Carey, AFL-CIO
vice president. In sharp letters to
House members who .voted for
the measure he called vindictive,
he wrote: "We shall do all in our
power to prove to the working
men and women in your district
that you have cast your lot against
them and they should therefore
lake appropriate action at the bal
lot box."
3. Many House members who
got Carey's letters. Their retorts
including "attempt at political
blackmail" and "a cheap effort at
intimidation." j
The new outburst stemmed from
House passage last week of a
labor control bill 'sponsored by
Heps. Phil M. Landrum (D-Ga)
and Robert P. Griffin (R-Mich).
The measure was backed by the
Eisenhower -administration. The
AFL-CIO had called the bill anti
union. Carey delivered Thursday's first
punch with his critical letters to
the 229 representatives who sup
ported the Landrum-Griffin bill
He also sent thank you letters to
the 201 who voted against the rela
lively strict bill. An aide said Ca
rey acted as president of the ln-
ternational Union of Electrical
Workers and with approval of its
officers.
"Who do you think you are to
be threatening members of the
United States Congress?" fired
Israel To Be Next Stop
For American Friends Aide
. By RUTH KING
Israel is the next stop for Elsie
Dickert who some time ago came
back from Alaska and an exciting
period to work on the Klamalh
Indian Reservation with headquar
ters at the Indian Agency.
During the time she was here
she spoke before members of the
Klamath Falls Soroptimist Club,
recalling some hair-raising expe
riences in tundra-flying while visit-
r.jwu,MnRRAY. JeanHAGEN
rr.ynlllllUO'WIWWI W-
'Admliiloii
Hsest
jf.
Klamatb Falli, Oregon
Servini Southern Oregon
and Northern California
Pubtlihed dally except Saturday bj
Southern Oregon Publishing Company
Main at Esplanade
Phone TUxedo 4-8111
, FRANK JENKINS. Editor
BILL JENKINS, Managing Edltoi
FLOYD WYNNE, City Editor
.Entered a aecond data matter at the
poit office at Klamatb Falls, Oregon,
on August SO. 1906, under act of
Congress. March 3, 1879. Secondclatf
postage paid at Klamath Falls, Oregon,
and at additional mailing offices.
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LAST 2 DAYS!
OMU TmIU :
CmMmm III. tjtm
Hill
IM TaaHa 1it n :!
ftiMta Stitretf lilt S.-SS
AUDREY HEPBURN
THE IMUIM'S
1 M - SIM 1
2r"V. I'm4" tm ' M 'sLPeter Finch
TECHNICOLOR
E
THIS YEAR'S (WE HOPE) NO. 1 MOTION PICTURE.
L
OTTo PREMINQES
EM
J RANT . .
Community
Loses Birds
MOUNT VERNON, N.Y. (API-
Otto Standke moved in, and the
starlings moved out. All of which
makes a bird of a story.
For 10 years, residents of this
area have been trying to get rid
of the starlings, that appear by
the thousands in August and mess
up the neighborhood. All efforts
failed including fire hoses,
battleship searchlights, skyrock
ets and dishpan pounding.
There was a big, hushed crowd
of humans at twilight Thursday
night when Standke, the starling
startler, appeared. Out of a bat
tered gray box about the size of
a plumber's tool kit the 71-year-
old Standke fished out two metal
flappers and a metal chime. He
hung the chime around his neck
and put the flappers on his hands.
Alternately banging the flappers
and sounding the chime, Standke
marched around the area for 45
minutes. At first Ihe starlings.
like the spectators, just stood
around and listened. Then the
winged villains took off, covey
alter covey.
Standke said he can't say why
Ihe noise he makes causes star
lings to take it on the lam.
He invented his contraption, he
said, after his home town of Great
Bend, Kan., spent $1,500 for alumi
num owls, putting them in the
trees to scare the birds. The star
lings just roosted on them.
NAMED FOR HIM
Harvard College, opened in lfiM.
was named lor John Harvard, a
young cleric in Charlestown, Mas
sachusetts. Harvard died in 163S
and left his entire library and half
of his other property to the strug
gling new institution.
ing Eskimo families in out of the
way places in the northernmost
tip of that country, then U.S. ter
ritory. She leaves soon for Acre on the
Mediterranean, 30 minutes from
Haifa. She will serve under the
American Friends Service and will
be in charge of a nursery school
and health clinic with a nurse.
She will work closely with an
Arabian mayor and hopes to play
a part in promoting mutual under
standing and faith between the
Arabs and the Jews.
Word of her new world travels
was sent by Elsie Dickert to Mrs..
Emit (Edna) Albrecht, past presi
dent and member of the local Sor
optimist Club. Enclosed in the let
ter was a check for Soroptimist
dues in the club for one year
Mrs. Dickert's travels began
with a career as a psychiatric
case worker for the American Red
Cross Army Service which took
her to various camps in the Unit
ed States, later to Kent State Uni
versity where she taught.
She sought to return to the Red
Cross psychiatric field following
the death of her husband but
changing qualifications in the age
bracket prevented it.
She learned that there was an
opening in the United States Bu
reau of Indian Affairs, took the
civil service examination, got by
without fudging on her age and
was sent, to Alaska.
With bush pilots she flew in all
kinds of weather, under all kinds
of conditions, visiting all fami
lies in that far region who needed
medical aid and other help. She
skimmed over rough water in wal
rus hide boats and experienced
numerous narrow escapes from
death.
Eventually she came back to the
United States and to her assign
ment on the Klamath Indian Reser
vation. From here she went brief
ly to an Indian reservation in Arizona.
Mrs. Dickert has had a book
of poems published, does profes
sional work in metals and is an
accomplished musician and photographer.
ROOFING & SIDING
APPLICATION
Excellent Work -Reasonable
Prices
Call TU 4-7894
r
and JOSEfH N. WELCH u Judge Wmw
3
5EORGE C. SCOTTORSON BMNRUSS BROWNMURRAY HAMILTONBROOKS WESTscretnpliy by WENDELL MAYES from
tfct beil seller by ROBERT T RAVER phologxphy by SAM LEAVITT production designed by BORIS LEVEN prsducetf And directed by
Ono PKtMINliLKA Columbia rcieiw rati t, Bh riiWH
DANCE
Red Barn
Sat.
Night
V,--:1 'Music By
ryV,"l V T'r i Bee nice
rSE TV EE
STIDHAM
4 Hi
ltH Valley Rear
1.00 Person
Dmm4ii t HM 1
Stay Young -Ga
Dancing
back Rep. Steven B. Derounion
R-NY).
"Carey's letter doesn't worry
me a damn bit," said Landrum
"You and too many other auto
cratic union bosses are guilty of
the unamerican philosophy of
class hatred," Rep. Edward J
Derwinski (R-IH) wrote in reply
to Carey.
While angry congressmen were
blasting back at Carey, the AFL-
CIO Executive Council adopted its
"cynical political maneuvering'
resolution. The action was taken
at the wind-up of the council's
summer meetings at Forest Park,
Pa.
The council charged there was a
deal in the House to pass a stiff
labor control bill iin exchange for
killing off any meaningful civil
rights legislation this year.
George Meany, federation presi
dent, said he had no direct evi
dence of any such deal between
Southern Dcjmocrals and Northern
Republicans, but added he and
other AFL-CIO chiefs feel sure
there is one.
Senate and House conferees
work again today on compromis
ing differences between the House
labor bill and the one passed ear
lier by the Senate. The AFL-CIO
also opposes the Senate bill, ' but
not as strongly as the House
measure.
-' . ,
Castro Cites
134 Persons
HAVANA (AP) r- Fidel Castro's
government so far has charged a
total of 134 persons with conspir
ing to overthrow the bearded re
volutionary leader's regime.
Forty-seven civilians and ' for
mer military men were charged
Thursday and taken to La Cabana
military fortress, where 87 per
sons previously charged are being
held.
The 134 were among thousands
arrested last week when the gov
ernment smashed a . counterrevo
lutionary plot which Castro said
originated in the Dominican Re
public, Large numbers of those
arrested have been released.
Liberia's flag, patterned after
"Old Glory," has one large star
instead of many small ones.
FILM
Developing
8-Picture Roll
' . Jumbo Prints
Western Thrift
7th & Main
Negro Home Vigil Kept
. Silk
jlhe porch, and dragged vtoitiay;
klinn'e tn tha laum '
I ! I I II '
. -jf
Columbia was ruled by Spai
for 300 years.
100K
thisFftYEK 1
grown in 1 FOR
I OREGON I
this label now for
fresher fryers
"the best place to shop , , . ofter oil"
New Shipment Just. Received! .
Newest in
v
Lowest in
PRICE
MATTRESS
PADS
reg. 4.95 JL.yy ;
DOUBLE AAV r
REG. 5.95
NEW EXTRA W THICK PAD
double ; - mob
SIZE . . . Reg. 12.98 I Ue7T
Drue luxury tt pin money coet for your deeping comfort
...Treat yourself and the family to the beat in net on
the .moat perfectly toft mattress pad made!
Completely eliminates bumps, never mats and never'
slips. It's non allergenic non toxic, dust free and it stays
delightfully cool in warm weather.
You'll enjoy the POLY-AIRE FOAM PAD'S cleanli
ness and freshness and -it's certainly washable.
DOWNSTAIRS STORE
Opening Monday. August 24
"THE TWO EDDIE'S
(GIPSON and riACET . "
'Appearing Niiely
For Your Dancing Pleasure
... I-
j yne oi in iNormwen must ouisianoing
musical groups . . . The Two Eddie i
Klamath Falls from success
success! Don't miss it! They're
rr
- muaivui grui
I comt ,tO K
I after succes
I greot!
Jl Make
Reservations Now
For an Evening of Fun!
PONDEROSA ROOM
AT THE WILLARD HOTEL