r IS. -4 1 1 i i rvjlo (Kill I J! L i. -'i j . i il IV. ! I. : ! 1 ' ' I k ! 'i ; m Observer, La Grande, Ore., Fdrrner Area Youth Represents Montana In National FFA Choir i DORAN HOPKINS Consultant Says Color Can Affect More Than Appearance By PATRICIA MCCORMACK Unitod Press Irttornational NEW YORK ( UPl)-If you want to look 10 years younger, be seen only in places where lights give off a purplish-red hue. A man who's been influencing human behavior with color for 21 years said he has documentary proof Ih.M the dyenamie sugges tion really works. "And if you doubt it," added Howard 'Ketcham, "flood your bathroom witli purplish - red and look in the mirror." The consultant has originated color and design plans for every make of car, for fountain pens, caskets, supermarkets, railroads, the telephone company and for just about every industry. Color affects more than appear ance. It can, said the expert, tat tle on your psyche. And the colors in your environment influence you to a startling degree. . The popularity of the grey flan nel suit Hong Madison Ave., ad- , vertlsing row, is a1. sign to Ket ehnm (hut the men who wear it 1 fear ,thc client. He said: I ; "Grey is a mousey color. It doesn't offend. It fades into the background. These men know they can't offend the client or over; shudow him." Some years ago, the Bluckfriurs Bridge in London was repainted from black to green. With, the color change Kelehain noted, came a 33 per cent reduction YOU CAN HAVE IT You ctn lv running water under pressure at relatively mall expense . . . a few lengths ei plastlo pipe . . . and this Fairbanki-Marsi self-criming shallow will turn. 1 "'" THE PUMP ALONE IS IDEAL FOR LAWN & GARDEN SPRINKLING Island City Hwy. WO 3-4524 i j gJi BRING IN YOUR OLD CASINGS FOR SAFETY SAWDUST TREAD RECAPPING Fri., Oct 10, 1958 Page 2 Doran Hopkins, a senior in (he Billings, Montana, High School. has been named to represent the state of Montana in the National Chorus of the Future Farmers of America. It. will be remembered that Doran was the La Grande Eve ning Observer's New Years baby in 1941 and was crowned King of Union County. At that time his father, Dr. Albert Hopkins, was Superintendent of Schools at Im bler. Later he became Superin U ndent of Schools at Union. Doran will leave the latter nart jj of this week for Kansas City, ! uonai unorus in the Municipal ! Auditorium where they are sehed i ulcd for numbcroiis performances. i lit- i-vuiiunui unorus will sing Dc- forc the American Royal Ball on ; October IV. Doran sings second tenor and exnccls to he in Kans. out week. 3 uoran is me son oi ur. Albert llopKins oi 33m iris Lane, Billings, Mont. Dr. Hopkins is Professor hI ICducalion at Eastern Montana College of Education, a unit of the University of Montana. Mrs. Mmlino tu n tnankon i tl. Billings Public Schools. - He is the grandson of Mrs. Mary Hopkins of Imbler. , . . the number of suicides there. When a supermarket wanted to do something to perk up sales in luxury foods, a subtle arrow de signin red was worked into the floor covering. It pointed at the luxury foods and, said Ketcham, the sub-conscious of shoppers re sponded. Sales zoomed. In an office, Ketchani said, the coldness of pale green walls fre quently gives girls the chills. In one office the girls shed their jackets and sweaters after the chairs were dressed in orange. The temperature hadn't changed, but they felt warmer. Other points made by Ketcham: An olive green room is com forting to persons with ulcers. Yellow walls increase brain activity and make) a person feel good, wide awake. Donations increase when char ities use pale blue-green envelopes in their mail soliciations. Red stimulates pulse, brain nm appyiito At dinner parlies, the purplish1 red that makes a person look ten years younger also stretches the beverages. "At least," said Ket chani, "most persons relax fast er. , OPINION ISSUED SALEM. (UPIi. A dentist who employs a corporation or other person to solicit patients is en gaged in unprofessional conduct for which lie may have his license suspended or revoked. Attorney General Robert Y. Thornton said Thursday. , Wo Carry The Complete Alemiie Line of LUBRICATION TOOLS & ACCESSORIES ' HAND GUNS LUBE CARTS LEVER GUNS TRANSFER PUMPS OIL DISPENSERS FITTINGS LUBE HOSE VOLUME BUCKET PUMPS INDUSTRIAL Machinery & Supply 1410 Adams Ph. 10071 FOR THE BEST PROTECTION ON SLICK AND ICY STREETS! EASES YOUR . PARKING AND TRACTION PROBLEMS! TURLEY S TIRE SERVICE Adams & Fourth Phone WO 3-4313 Thornton Issues OpinionOnPassing On Highway SALEM IUPI) A vehicle which turns into the loft lane to pass another vehicle moving in the same direction violates the law unless the left lane is clearly visible and free of , oncoming traffic for a sufficient distance to allow safe passing, Attorney Gen eral Robert Y. Thornton said Thursday. The opinion had been asked by the district attorney of Deschutes county. I XJaJST i .ii.r-.r."..-.-., I ;EWrmS i i ! Hit PPDini,,, AMERICAN CAPITALISTIC-TYPE Highly reminisccnt.of the now defunct Packard is this Utest entry in the Russian automobile field, called the "ZIL-III." Built in Moscow, the auto h.is an eight-cylinder engine developing 220 horsepower, with a top speed of- 105 m.p.h. It """ra uuuui.-cumroiicci transmission, power Drakes and steering and a -windshield washing device. One of the most de luxe autos in Russia, it also boasts powpr windows, heater, and two-speaker radio. Some models will also have air-conditioning. Photo and caption material are from an official Soviet source LIBERTY RISING What at Hist gUmce looks like the Statue of Liberty in untamilutr surioiuicliiiiis i:; actually a one-ttfth-ai.c replica of America's famous Lady. Tho .'U-fnot, 20,()(T0 potuui bronze statue is being hoisted to the top of the Liberty National Life Insurance Building in Birmi lignum, Ala., where its gas-tired torch will sheet li.uht 1 84 lei-t above the city. Like her big sister in New York Hai'bor, MNs Liberty was made in France. Stabbing Victim Denies Woman ' Caused Wound PORTLAND 'UPIi Stabbing victim Alfred E. Keifer testified in Circuit Court Wednesday , that he didn't believe that Phyllis (Torchyi Jessing caused the stab wound that nearly took l"s life Kicfrr, testifying .as, a slate s witness in the assault with a deadly weapon trial of the red haired Miss Jessing, said he planned to marry Miss Jessing as soon as she can get a divorce from her husband. The 35 - year - old Kiefer was slabbed in the abdomen last July 11 while at a tavern. UO Fraternity Pledges D. White UNIVERSITY OK OREGON, Eugene (Special) Fraternities at the University of Oregon pledg ed 304 students nt the close of full rush week, Sunday, Sept. 28. liiirhing for the 20 national fra ternities began on Wednesday. Sept. 24 following the opening of New Student Week on Sept. 21. Freshmen men who pledged will live in University dormitories during their first year on the campus and will move into their fraternities at the start rf their sophomore year. Upperclass stu dents who pledged will move in to their living organizations im mediately.' The following student from I.o Grande was pledged by the Ira ternities on the campus: Delta Tan Delta: Darrcll White. The, l'owder Valley High school student body has elected cheer leaders. They are as follows: Lin da I'fel, Lynne Vuneil, and Kay Griffith; all arc sophomores. OPEtsI SATURDAY MORNING FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE Paint Products, Accessories Glass, Builders Hardware MILLER CABINET SHOP . Jefferson and .Greenwood Ingrid Bergman; No (Has Ingrid Bergiran any re grets for the life i he has led? Would she do things differently if she had it all to live over? These are among the questions the Swedish' actress answers to day for British newsman Ralph Cooper, who interviewed her over a two . week period In Wales. This is the fl'jrth of five chapters.) By RALPH COOPER Sitting there on our Welsh! Ag Department Contracts Wheat ShipmentsTolndia PENDLETON lUPIl- The U.S. Agriculture Department this week signed a contract to deliver more than 100 million bushels of wheat to India and more than 22 million bushels of the order are expected to be shipped from the Pacific Northwest, according to Dick Baum, administrator of the Ore gon Wheat Commission. Baum said he expected the sale to "fiini up the wheat market, but not as spectacularly as two years! ago. lie predicted prices would rise because the Indian govern ment would pay more than 238 million dollars under the contract, 80 million dollars for wheal and the rest for grains, corn and transportation. Under the contract, the wheal must be delivered to Indian ports by Dec. 31. IKO, Baum said. wondering how to do it?...' do it with DOLLARS clothing -pay old bills buy newer car home repairs new furniture buy appliances etc. etc. Robert I, 111 Mm St. mountainside, T asked Ingrid Bergman what she meant when she said she had to get away from Hollywood when she did. She al repdy had explained that her mar riage to Dr. Peter Lindstrom. though not successful, was "not altogether unhappy." "I could not stay there any longer grinding out pictures in the same pattern all the time, she said. "I could not go on playing good and beautiful girls all my Elderly Hunter Succumbs After 2 Day Ordeal TILLAMOOK (UPD An elderly deer hunter, Frank Sullivan, res cued after being lost in a rugged wooded area south of here for two days, died in Tillamook General hospital Wednesday about 5:30 p.m. The 70-year-old hunter had left his home in Tillamook to deer hunt in the dense thickage early Monday morning intending to re turn the same day. He was found by search parlies Wednesday morning and brought out of the area on a "jury-rigged" stretcher and taken lo tho hospi tal in a sheriff's ear. Sullivan had taken no food or water on (ho hunt and he had no matches. During the two days of his ordeal periodic rain storms blanketed the area. The hunter told his rescuers when they found him less than two miles from a highway that he had used his last rifle shot early Tuesday trying lo attract attention. He was taken lo the hospital suffering from shock, exposure and exhaustion and doctors had heid some hope that he might re cover. The hospital said he died of a heart ailment complicated by his ordeal. DA To Seek Probe Qf 'Lawlessness' In Oakridge Area EUGENE (UPD Lane County District Attorney Eugene C. Venn raid Tuesday he plans to ask the Lane county grand jury to launch a full-scale investigation into, al leged "lawlessness" in the Oak ridge area, where the Internation al Woodworkers of America union has been on strike against Hines Lumber Co. since June 3. Venn said 20 subpenas have been issued and are being served. Although he did not connect the "lawlessness" directly with the Hines Lumber strike, he said the acts of violence are "apparently directly associated with a pending labor dispute." Venn said there was a derail ment last summer of a yard freight train, that a state police car and logging vehicles had been "sabotaged." and that there had been reports of violence threats. He blamed a "small handfull of men" for the violence and said the investigations were hampered by individuals afraid to talk. Do all those things you'd like to do with dollars from us. Money for every worthy purpose on Signature only, car or furniture. $25 to $1500 Oregon rrrnr i Raines, Mannjror WO. :S-21i l. LnGrandc Regrets, life ... I had to act everything . . . girls with problems on their minds, difficult girls, prostitutes. They told me I was wrong. They told me people loved me because I was one thing to them. 'Stay and give them what they want, they pleaded. What? All my life? I just couldn t do it. "I'm an actor," Ingrid contin ued, remarking with a little smile. "I always think of myself as an actor, not- an actress.. I live in a world of make-believe. This prompted me to ask her, are actors people? "Of course they arc," said In grid. "Wonderful, warm-hearted generous people. Larger than life they may be, but that's why they are actors. I. don't think they should try and live like Mrs. Jones in her little house with her humdrum life and perhaps limited ideas. Actors should get every thing they can out of life." Should they have different stan dards to ordinary people . . . Are they entitled to be judged dif ferently? . , . ' Certainly not entitled,' said Ingrid, "but how do you set stan- dards' for anyone? I don't think they should be judged aifferently If anything the standards should be higher because the ac tor has greater responsibilities. "There are some actors who say 'I am important. I can do this and get away with it you can't.' But they are only the little ones . . .You don't find the real actors talking that, way." mow much does an actor owe to his public? Are they entitled, as some. of them seem lo think, to own them body and soul? . ingrid replied: "That is perhaps the most difficult question lo de cide. On the stage you can never come that close . . . The footlights are between you and they always stay between. But on the screen you arc right up in the public s lap . , . They see you in great close-ups, they see you in love scenes and in tragedies. and they feel they know you very well." . . "I think it is really unfair that so much notice should be taken of actresses.. An actress wears a red or yellow dress . . . This . is worth a comment. So it is if she wears pajamas or a transparent nightie . . . Yet there must be thousands of real people.. . . like Gladys Ayhvard. whose story I am playing in 'The Inn of the Sixth Happiness', who do the most won derful things . . . and nobody ever hears of them. I don't think it is fair. People think film starsluive a hard life . . . They do not realize and arc surprised we have to got up so early in the morning... Din wnai is mat.'. Anyone can cot up early in the morning.. l tninu 1 have a wonderful life. THE MARK XIV. 'UfLAwoy" Soeok.r conlnins- lo Ft clionnel speaker system. 4 speakers 2 in "Vielrolo," 2 in remov able lid. New "living Stereo" tone arm. Charcoal Gray 'While simulated leather. (Model SHPI4.I You simply place the speaker-lid 8 fret away-and you can thrill to True Stereo! .Music so lifelike the musicians seem to surround you! All from this one compact system! I feet away-and you can thrill to True mMWJ . A I mtJTW I I Plays new stereo records and all others, too. lightweight and portable New 2-in-l amplifier "A Handsome luggage case Large Small Electric Radios RCA Sil?(nit5 . . . and Transistor Radios RECORD Wmfii $19.95 $23.95 $36.95 PLAYERS. iSS LA GRANDE WO 3-4232 As Such I get paid a lot of money for d"'""' what I like doing acting. And when you are the star u.cy, a. - ways want to keep you happy . . . So people are running around you all the time to see that you are warm; or cool, and that you don t get your feet wet. I think it is a wonderful, exciting life. "All my life I have looked for excitement. I have always tried lo get the most out of life some times, though, as I have discov ered, the most can be too much." Docs Ingrid ever wish she could put the clock back and have an other chance to live her life all over again? She paused, and considered it before she answered. "No . . . I don't think" so ,.. No And if I did have that chance I would wish it to be the same "Mind you . . . if the things that happened to me when I was younger happened to me now . . . perhaps the result would be dif ferent. "Bui when you are young you cannot know everything . . . You have to learn ... It is just that il is more difficult for some people than others. And some people never learn anyway. "Knowing what I know now, 1 Prinevifle Dam Contract Awarded sal lo as sow To WASHINGTON (UPII The interior Department has an nounced the award of a $2,614,y44 Bureau of Reclamation contract for the construction of Prineville dam, initial feature of the Crooked river project in central Oregon. ' The low bidder was Keystone Construction Co.-' and Associates of Prineville. The Department said 18 bids- were received, rang ing to a high of $4,840,440. The contractor will have two years and four months to complete the job. For Your Dancing And Listening Pleasure! Sand nSage l $1.00 down NEVV IAim XIV TOfiTBLE STIsMJjO TOIt ' LID CONTAINS SECOND ), 1 $1.00 per wk. .WE GIVE "S.&H." GREEN STAMPS Radio & Music Supply George Tiss, Prop. 1st Nat'l. Bank Bldg. For Events think, 'How can a young girl of it! ami a ymma u oi zi Know 1 'enough lo get married and know that they will be happy? How can "they?' But they marry . . . and the very, very lucky ones live happily ever afterwards. There are no rules for happy marriages it is different for everyone. "Look around among your friends . . . how many of them are really,, fully, happily married? "A lot of them are happy, in a limited sort 'of way . . . They make do. with a little happiness. But perhaps the chance has never come lo them to have anything else ... to have what promises to be great happiness? I wonder if they would take tiic chance if it came? "1 know what people say about Hollywood marralges. Why (0 they bother to get married? "Well, it's so easy lo say that. But when, il comes to marriages . . . I don't think Hollywood is so very different from say the so ciety set in any great city ... ex cept that every time anyone sneezes in Hollywood it gets in the papers." Ingrid looked at me and posed a question: "Although, on the surface, the man and the woman in the street and I appear to be worlds apart . . . are we really so different? What do they want out of life . . . and what do I want out of life?" She paused, and answered: '"Happiness, I suppose. That's what everybody wants. But what is happiness? It's different for everybody. "I've had happiness .-. . a lot of happiness. And I hope I shall have some more . . ." BANK EXECUTIVE DIES ROSEBURG (UPIi Andrew Broddus, 58. assistant manager of the Roseburg branch of the U.S. National bank, died Wednesday in a hospital here from complications following major surgery. SWEET DANCEABLE. LISTENABLE MUSIC BY ORCHESTRA! Friday & Satutrday , , Evenings Lounge In The Sac ENTERPRISE 771 ii i '17 'j-!