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Show ta f The Salt Lake Tribune, Tuesday, November 5, s&&m 1968 py BUI williams GOP Notes $17 Million Vote Expense By Robert A. Hunt Associated Press Writer Three reports came in by registered mail at noon Monday. Two others were hand delivered later, arriving only 30 - WASHINGTON Republicans filed a series of tardy campaign committee financial reports Monday and then announced they are spending at least $17 million on the 1968 election. J. W, Middendorf, treasurer of the GOP National Committee, said all of the bills arent in yet but the spending total will be $17 million or "slightly more. This compares with $14.4 million he said was spent by all Republican committees in the unsuccessful effort to elect Barry Goldwater in 1964. minutes before closing time. All of the reports were due nine days ago. Both the Humphrey and Wallace campaigns filed their reports last week. n Also Delinquent "The Democrats were delinquent on these same reports for six months in 1964 after the election, Middendorf told a reporter, "and not a word was said then. Any criticism of us would have to be called selective indignation. Middendorf said the Republicans, so far, have filed reports with the House clerk which list a total in contributions of of $13,259,882 and Demo Estimate , Democrats, last week, placed their campaign spending estimates at between $10 million and $12 million. Middendorf, asked why their reports V were late being filed with the House V clerk, said it was due to a "clerical ll 'fne Campaign Committee report, which contained no totals on spending, arrived at midday on election eve along with those from the Republican National Finance Operations Committee and the Republican National FiNixon-Agne- nance Committee, both of which had figures. A spokesman in the House clerk's office said the law does not have a specific penalty for late filings but does have general penalties for violations of a r $1,000 fine or prison term. The statements also are supposed to have a yearly total, the spokesman said. He added that other statements for some Nixon-Agnecommittees due five days before the election still were overdue. The ones received Monday were due 10 to 15 days before the election. over-al- l Best Result Your Uncle Fred is hungry . . . The bar ran out of olives. FOR A BRAND NEW ONE WASHINGTON ce (AP)-- Vi President Hubert H. Humphreys major political backers in organized labor lodged an election-evcharge Monday night of a $1 million top secret business campaign to dee molish unions. George Meany, president of Nebraskan Dies, Former Senator -FWASHINGTON (AP) Sen. Edward R. Burke of Nebraska died Monday at a nursing home in the 13.6 - million - member called on all unions AFL-CI- to redouble their efforts in behalf of Humphreys Democratic presidential bid against Republican Richard M. Nixon third-partand candidate y George C. Wallace. Meany did not link any of the candidates to the alleged business campaign. Meany asserted the U.S. Chamber of Commerce is behind a campaign to destroy federal labor laws. ormer nearby Md., Kensington, where he had been a patient for three years. He was 87. an attorney in Burke, Omaha, Neb., before he entered politics, was elected to the House in 1932. A Democrat, Burke served' one term and was then elected to the Senate in 1934 where he r term. He served one failed to win nomination for a second term. six-yea- . Cites Story "A U.S. Chamber of Commerce official revealed details of a million-dolla- r drive to destroy the effectiveness of the National Labor Relations Act, Meany said, citing a story in the Los Angeles Times. A spokesman for the Chamber of Commerce said it has had a special committee for three years studying recommendations for changes in labor laws. "Meany is wrong when he the says this Js secret, spokesman said. Firm Hired The Los Angeles Times story said the public relations firm of Hill & Knowlton in New York had been hired at an estimated cost of $500,000 to run the campaign. Bert C. Goss, chairman of Hill & Knowltons board of directors, said "This figure of ' ''' $500,000 HI f PERMANENT PRESS CYCLE ... and its GAS is a ridiculous exaggeration, but declined to say how much the firm is being paid. A spokesman for the public relations firm said it had issued a memorandum several days ago describing the Labor Law Study Committee sponsored by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. - WASHINGTON (AP) One of the FBIs "10 most wanted was captured Monfugitives day at a suburban Los Angeles gas station, the agency announced. Director J. Edgar Hoover said Robert Lee Carr, 22, had been working at the gas station under the name of Robert Daniels. He was an escapee from a Pennsylvania jail and had been charged with robbery, holding a hostage in prison, conspiracy and prison breach. Arrested with him was Michael Lynn Clark, 20, who the FBI said also escaped from the Northumberland County Jail in Sunbury, Pa., last Sept. 16 after assaulting a deputy U.S. marshal and locking guards in a cell. Carr is a native of Sunbury and had earlier escaped from the same jail. Two other men who escaped with them were recaptured the same day after a brief gun battle with Pennsylvania state police. Calorie Cut Advised Smith By Washington Post Writer WASHINGTON Unless the new president changes plans already made, the inaugural parade on Jan. 20, 1969, will be the shortest in many representative is John Sharon, a lawyer and longtime aide of the late Adlai Stevenson who was also a former law partner of George Ball and the present Secretary of Defense Clark Clif- years. Tentative plans, subject to ratification by the presidentelect, call for a parade lasting two hours and 20 minutes, with only four units representing each state. The parade route also has been shortened to start in the mall area at Pennyslvania Avenue at 5th Street, Northwest, rather than on Capitol Hill as in the past. The parade lasted three hours four years ago, and three hours and 15 minutes in Nixons representative is Robert G. McCune, an official (UPI) -Because many Americans tend to grow wider as they grow older, a nutrition group has recommended a cut in their daily calorie intake. The reduction was proposed by the food and nutrition board of the National Research Council in the 1968 edition of its booklet, "Recommended Dietary Allowances. For what it called the reference man (22 years old, 154 pounds moderately active) the recommended allowance was 2,800 calories a day, a reduction of 100 from the 2,900 calories recommended in the 1964 edition. ijl'-tdOi- TRAVELWARE CraMRMP Optional end-o- f cycle signal damp-dr- settings y Heat 3 Selections Model DG-4720- E NOTHING WITH DOWN APPROVED CREDIT i,i$k theffwoman t pr month WATER HEATERS Guaranteed Call 62 . . you'll b amsupinaowireefn UufcCo inaugural committee. next years inaugural Hamlets Tallv Early Votes, Nixon 15, Humphrey 8 DIXVILLE NOTCH, N.H. (AP) Two little New Hamp- shire mountain hamlets were among the first in the nation to vote early Tuesday one going unanimously Republican as usual while the other plit its vote for the first time. All 11 registered voters in the White Mountain town of Ellsworth cast straight Republican ballots, as they normally have in the past. But in Dixville Notch, the 12 voters gave Democrat Hubert H. Humphrey 8 votes to Republican Richard M. Nix4. of the Balsams Hotel where the voting took place. New Hampshire law allows towns to set the hours for the opening of the polls, and to close them after every registered voter has cast his ballot. Town Clerk Greenes southern drawl is a marked contrast to the Yankee twang of his neighbors. He came here three years ago from Inman, S.C., to manage the hotel. Dixville is in Coos County, a bellwether in voting, boasting it has been carried by every winning President since 1884. A O V IRT ImT N T f Way Discovered to Hold False Teeth Don't be confused! a Vote AGAINST X Proposition 4 (0WS?G0IE SEE 0500 00030 CO GUBQSB ssaasw ass! am ugiEv Quid (3 ARRANGE G03D to GG0MB GmD GBQdHDGnniiB J CONVENIENT LOCATIONS Heres why: pay some tion, artificially pushing up prices. It would continue discriminatory taxing practices and be a step leading to a classified property tax. It would create added assessment AMPLE FREE PARKING xuviarnfr tVMli nfS4liC4l It would encourage lend specula It would up ifftH4Y,A ;r t. j 433? ij5i.i-A4Nr- ni ? Ju'ili- - j 'null . 33.f hinder orderly urban growth. tut' ... eV--S fiilllZllS UNITED CITIZENS AGAINST HIGHER TAXES Beverly S. Clcndcnin, GLAD you didl 4700 J. Slot., Murray Chairman tn id politic! odvertiiemenl .a.. ,ni 7 1 BFUNTQN ifirmrrrTmn smallest the September, monthly increase this year. In June and July prices were a "1 tA Kb I r ilr s - ii a- -f r Sfara front Parkin ffa' two-tent- difficulties. 262-255- Open Daily til 6 Fridays 'til 9 Cenettueo However, Nixon has indicated that he may name an honorary chairman, Dale Miller, in setting up the framework for one elses taxes. WATER HEATER LEAKING; STr-rni- 1969 It would force you to ivho owns as GAS dryer Permaglass and with big twenty inches of hanger rail. You-careach, remove or replace every garment (up to 4 suits or 6 dresses) instantly. The covered shoe compartment holds four pairs, the f toilet kit is waterproof, and two roomy zip pered pockets hold shirts or blousesand accessories. . Mens and Women's L'V models. From $ 1 3 5. zip-of- EXTEND FREEPORT ning sessions. Should Humphrey be elected president, Sharon is expected to become chairman of the SACMOBILE Snap open the patented Extendo-Bar- s your Sacmobile becomes a closet (Copyright) two of Analyzes Price First, he pointed to the rise of one percent in of the Consumer Price Index in Why waste fun time unpacking and packing Take along this traveling closet Air-flu- ff and was who Ellsworth and near the BAKERSFIELD, Calif. A new discovery called Acryline is big Canadian border. news. Users say it fits plates so Dixville Notch always voted beautifully they cant believe it. Republican, but development Acryline uses a startling new vacuum principle.lt flows on plates of a new ski area in the wilseal. Users derness has brought in some and forms an air tight to natural say this feels akin new families. teeth. This wonderful feeling Neil Tillolson, the town lasts six months before repeatmoderator, also is the owner ing. Acryline is at all drug stores l. Electronic Sensor Corp., of V (fiuno Lockheed ll served on Nixons campaign staff in 1960 and was an official in the Commerce Department during the Eisenhower administration. P r e s i d ential candidate Wallace also has George named a preinaugural director, Maj. Gen. Taylor Hardin, a member of his campaign staff. However, Hardin has not attended any of the plan- The old pension building, Abraharrf Lincolns where first inaugural ball was held, will serve as headquarters for the 1969 inaugural committee. Making the plans there are two directors named by presidential candidates Hubert H. Humphrey and Richard M. Nixon. In 1960 Nixon got the votes of all eight registered voters then in the town, which is situated some 75 miles north affiMURs affl tvtoa) ttimfl (Dk$ W with that our over-aprice performance is still far from satisfactory. But improvement is a fact and no longer just a forecast. His evidence kinds. a year. "The only important excepto the better picture, tion Okun said, wa. construction, where costs rose "at a disturbing and accelerating rate this summer." In general, Okun said, "No longer do we see the unhealthy feverish complexion marked the economy from late 1967 to the middle of thh year. On the key inflation question Okun said: "It should be emphasized that analyzed I WASHTNGTON TKRtfkr ! ford. 1961. ons Hun Due Okun Second, In it, Okun also disclosed that the nations international close to transactions were balance in the third quarter, the best result for a quarter in more than three years. Figures on the balance of payments are not yet complete and will be released in one-yea- of one per- one-ha- lf broader measure of prices in all sectors of the economy called the "gross national product deflator. After allowing for the special influence of a federal pay raise, which raised prices in the government sector, the rest of the economy showed for the entire third quarter a price rise at an annual rate of 3.1 percent, down sharply from the 4.1 percent rate that prevailed in the first half of the chief FBI Arrests President-Elec- t HHHs Backers in Labor Suspect on Whoop-de-d- o Brief List Wanted Note Plan to Bar Unions Maria Humphreys DIAMOND RING . - $1 Million Top Secret YOUR going up cent a month. Recent WASHINGTON economic evidence indicates that the nation has turned the corner toward price staPresident Johnson bility, was told Monday. The report came from his economic adviser, Arthur Okun, whose brief analysis of the situation was released by the Texas White House in San Antonio on election eve. Figure n He said this over-atotal comes from a scries of 10 committee reports. If a total was not included on one of these reports, he said it was due to a clerical backlog. TRADE-I- expenditures $13,222,020. urns the Corner On Prices, LBJ Hears New York Times Service problem "and they have been sent over since. Over-al- l u a to - ; &, vt-- -l uv mmmsmmmim |