I . ' - ,,, , .,, W 1 ' . f OUT OUR WAY -, By J- R- Williams OUR BOARDING HOUSE ' With Major Hooplo f j :"-"'- T v.vus. ni V. v6--tH'NOPP,w 'VI i ?JTi2i24A iV'. '1 s " -,V--4 of spring.' ( woupfrfdl lambs-th' perfume l OS WImRW THE P'SWT, "Mc J-V H PICKED LP Sy I :S-..PH-. TO BE alive. ) Of BUSOM-.W . iCOPi-S EsCUTCiAEON WILL 6c PURtMSf? ' n5! Va p-t i i i'-htS soS ;2 voujusTSHuTvSiR RiOKeS I MIGHT 6N0UR6 g63? VstMjV f 6V6samphouhour tos6 oRA-neo imtoahs abandon y v8 - J I. , ! fSSfet. WOSE, AW CARCASS T0TM6 BUZZARDS.' X iVnTT , i T ,....-. ME5PL5 .wTTC.. .Tiagy ) ' i; ,., , I't Kora w nrr-mrr pptm -n I i i ' i r I i , j . j THE STORY OF MARTHA WAYNE - " ' ' By Wilson Scruggs ! , f I I II LrT VOUSOUWD f I'M 50WS IT ALONE FTOM WOW OKlfl SHE HELOA -.".ilX 1 i', ' - 1 L-u-teLb if vou've i V' s. sis. mikeou before ; : ! DAIIA,ICAME MEI?E TO TMrWKVOU FOKALL7 BEEW ( THAT MARTHA WAVWE JTr TvWrt& MEWWA.-r 11 ; I I! THE HELP VOU'VC GlVEU ME IN THE PAST. IllWACTISWS V IS BEHIND ALL THIS; " 'IflSl If , r-L-'t ,S",r3W.Si ' r KEPAVY0UAS5O0NA5LTMAT ISN'T SHE? Xwi U , If jl !! ? i i 1 Vl'-MriTl psqyUIJ LKzl i J FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS By Merrill Blosser t FOGEY.1 1 cany stamp wait for You 1 The mowe naw.' hes crvim' tAOSE H BE ONE OF THOSE TEAO. . I6RKERS SNIPFIN .' i , HlDArby r1 Tao? AL Af-r M MECe J II ' . aYVt ?L'x1k. V 4,.Vnif-.-sCk DrK'SK' CAPTAIN EASY Bv Leslie Turner I j ,r ' fmnrmfrsb,J'ZZ g'jjHH UH1 IT'LL tlffXT I " MR. THROWN. HOW L0W3 Y ABOUT TWO I HOW CN WE ATTAcH THI5 t&MT I I w ifw Lcn rt'it V nifciAii in vu&r ocAinkii M i ' f-Miff la.uk Tutru mm cii&uV n i ae Tupcrt av rucki I Diffrv Atcoesz upx P! irs I I I If TRIP T3 THRAWN'S ii mi ii - COUMTR.V IF I TAK6 THI& - . n I 50 UN50CIABLEf LEAVS IT TO , I f Mie CAN TAKE W J;"1 V TRAIL FROtt WARA AlONG fe7L, V, CSCILY i I US PAST WALACHI V' V:;,1 . V THtKUWIKIVtm fc iV- VWS. 1 . .5W-Wia. lU-li.,:s; AV-''- uyri n -iTHPI IfciJ'!'"',' r" Tfti ', - r,)i , I r.- '""f ' ALLEY OOP " By V. T. Hamlin fft' ; j 'JrT "".NIAV UJUK.WEKfcSStl ATSKIoHT, I J HOLYCCW, VVEJ SHOWDO x r'""S O' V BE KING WE AIKIT SOT SN0U6H I W WOMEM I ) WOM6M j THAT.' JvL ) HEAK ) THAT ( CAN'T WE ( SAVj . . Ti. V LEFT TVOre ON WHO ITS Jv VOTE TOO.' K VOTE? THAT? WAY? 1 VOTE? X ? BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES ' ' By Edgar Martin V PRISCILLA S POP By Al Vermeer i I . 1 1 ( THEY'RE) I I OP COURSE, IP WE LIKEDl I...WITH THE MONEY ) I , . JPRETTY S TO BE A ROCK 'N' ROLL (.WE'D SAVE ON HIS f ) WISH WEV--n EXPENSIVEj SINGER WE t- I HAIRCUTS! r (COULD BUY CARLYLE) VTW 1 HAZEL! COULD BUY J v lj , . VI A MUSICAL r- C, T V IT---7 7 HIM A T ft t '-r- frN- ' Instrument Jaa. te , vguja; .1 ''Y' ) BUGS BUNNY ' ' , " i s 1 1 . IwhATS. YEU 1 THAT POTTEP ( UNLAX ...I'LL ) LLEMA"E KMOW IF YA ) 't4pMPM(''" PROBLEM, ELMEen TWEE YOU SaO VGETT'TH' HAVE ANY WOCE j-s i ,' Itil'IC". I'M .N A ,-f KEEPS R0OTO'TH' PKOBlEMS: . N--ix i . I .... JWX I PA00P1N6... y TROUSuE IN IvT" I 'A'Jl-i'r j-l I Cuba's Controversial Boss Visits In U.S. This Week By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign News Editor Cuban Premier Fidel Castro storms the United Slates this week. ' The word "storm" is used ad visedly about this controversial figure whose revolution in Cuba began as a local disturbance in the mountains of Orieten Prov ince in 1956, but so gained in fury that it was a full-scale hurricane which swept all before it by the time it reached Havana in 1958. Nor was its fury abated after Castro succeeded in ousting for mer President Fulgencio Batista and took over himself as premier. Since then Castro has lashed in all directions, with the United Slates a favorite and frequent tar get on subjects running the gaunt from military, through political and business. Besides delivering a speech be fore the American Society of Newspaper Editors in Washing ton, Castro also is expected to ask the U.S. for economic aid and for a revision unward of Cuba's sugar quota in the United States. As result, his policies will come under considerable scrutiny. They also came under scrutiny last week in a meeting of Ameri can ambassadors to 12 Caribbean nations, held in San Salvador. At the San Salvadbr meeting, U.S. Ambassador to Cuba Philip W. Bonsai was understood to have expressed concern over evidences of increasing Communist activity in Cuba but to have held out the overall hope that Cuba eventually would settle down as a stable, free-world democracy. Castro himself has said hq is not a Communist. There is no such certainty about his brother, Raul, nor about some of his other lieutenants. During the fighting stages of his revolution, Castro said many times he would accept help from any quarter, including the Com munists. Communist or not. there is no doubt about the leftward . tenden cies of many of those now in pa sitions of influence In Cuba. The newspaper Revolution which speaks for the revolution ary movement, recently brought out a weekly magazine section called "Luncs de Revolucion". The name lias no political signifi cance but the editorial content seems to have. In it are Karl Marx's Commu nist manifesto: Vladmir Mayacov sky's "Ode To The Revolution"; John Reed's "The Ten Days That Shook The World"; excerpts from CALENDAR OF EVENTS THURSDAY 6:30 p.m., Elk's Clam Feed at the Lodge. 7:30 p.m.. La Grande Farm Bureau Center potluck dinner pnd meeting. Farm Bureau Hall at Island City. 8 p.m., Eagles Lodge at Eagles Hall. Trotsky's "The History Of. The Russian Revolution": and Nicolas Guillen's poem "La Voz Esperan zada" (The Hopeful Voice'. Guillen is a Cuban Commu nist poet. An editorial introducing the new magazine said: "We want to say, simply thai we are not Communists. So that we may also say we arc not anti Communists. We are intellectuals, artists and writers of the left so much to the left that at times we see Communism pass by the side and place itself on the right in many questions of art and lit erature." These intellectuals who are to the left of Communism do not take kindly to criticism, real or implied, or to reporting which may take some of the shine from the glory of their revolution. Castro himself sees an enemy behind every woodpile. Last week. United Press Inter national became one of his tar gets. A UPI dispatch had reported in stances of labor unrest, sabotage and the presence of small, armed counter-revolutionary groups in the interior of Cuba. The infor mation also bad been published in local Havana newspapers. Castro described it as a "cam paign of defamation" and a "base criminal work against Cuba." Salary Increase Bill Passes SALEM (UPD Senate bill 503 which increases salaries of Ore gon legislators from $600 a year to $175 a month was passed by the Senate and sent to the House. If passed and signed by the gov ernor the salary increase will be used as a test case before the Oregon Supreme Court on the question of the right of legislators to increase their own salaries. Sen. R. F. Chaoman iD-Coos Bay), one of the sponsors, said an opinion on the constitutionality of the law would be sought from the attorney general. "We then have papers rady to file with the Supreme Court in order that we may get a ruling and settle this question once and for all." The bill passed with only one dissenting vote, that of Sen. Fran cis Ziegler (R-Corvallisi. The amount of the increase in the bill coincides with the amount contained in a constitutional amendment already passed by the Legislature and referred to the voters. Senator's Mother Has 104th Birthday SALEM (UPI i Mrs. W. II. Husband, mother of State Sen. Donald R Husband IR-Eugenci, celebrated her 104th birthday Tuesday. Husband told fellow senators his mother still reads two daily newspapers and writes between 300 and 400 letters a year to friends and her 45 grandchildren and 50 great-grandchildren. DAILY TV LOG 2KREM y KXLY r KHQ TV TV O TV THURSDAY r,:00 lliu-klcbcrry Huund .WW. Spurt Movie Cunt G : I . " Duuu Kdwards :::0 NulvnlnMt 1 I.nve Lucy Front Pniro (!:.' " .VHO N.'wn 7:ii0 Uiirns unit Allien Jeff's rolliu Highway I'tilrol "::io l.i'uvn H to lli-aver Derringer Slale Trooper S:llil Zorro Xane Gray Thriller Lawless Years X:ir, " " K::m Ileal Mefoys I'l.ii house "..ft OldMuohlle Theatre S : IS " " " !i:iio Pal liuoiie Sen Hunt !l:ir, i :::!! Itonirh Khlers ' " ICi nle Kord 0:tr. 111:00 Dial Wi liulil Venture Yull Met Your Life 10:1.1 I II : :10 Nlghlheat, J. Duly Niplit IMII lull. KptK. News 10:15 " Lute Show l.nle Movie 11:00 Cliannell 2 Theatre ' " 11:1.-, 11:30 " " " 1 1 : 1 r. " " ' FRIDAY S:00 tonl. Classroom S : 1 .". S:HI , Q-Tooni) R:4T. n -no AlornliiB Playhouse DoukIi lie Ml 1:15 !::tn ilmHrey Time Treasure Hunt !l:4.ri " 10:110 I Love l.iiey Prlee Ih HlKht I 0 : 1 r. H:30 Top Dollar 'onrentral Ion 111:1 r. 11:0(1 lloniper Koolu Love Of Life Tic Tnc Dough ll:tr. " " ' ' U::i0 Slorv L,mly Senlvh for Tomorrow It Could Ro You ll:l. KHCM Cartoons tlulillni; l.ipht " 12:00 Ouiltly Dean Show It's A llrcut Life yueen l'"or ft Day 12:1.'. I2::i0 " As the World Turns Hok&Is IlnRtrls !2.-r. " ' " 1 oo Musie IliiiKO .Tlnimy Dean Show Youni? Dr. Malono '1:15 l:::o Slur Perforinnlieo llouseparty From These Uoota t : 1 5 " " " oo Day In Court I'.Ir I'nyoff Truth or Con.seij. 2: 15 " " 2 :t'i ilale Storm Show Verdiel Is Yours Counly Knir 2 : 1 5 " 57llO Heal The Clock llrlithter Day Matinee on Six 3:15 " Secret Sturm " 3:30 Who Do You Trust Kuuo of Night " 3 : 15 '' " " 4-00 Am. Handstand Cliff Carl Show 4 : 1 .1 1 :3o Early Show - 1:15 " " rnir tin up 5:00 Pepeyo " 1'lve O'Clnek Movie 5:15 5:30 Mickey Mousu Cluli " 5:45 " l.lle-O Observer, La Crande. Ore., Thurs,, April 16, 1959 Page 10 Pow Wow Registration Table Listed For Variety Of Events Registration deadlines for the various group and individual events and contests of the La Grande Pioneer Pow Wow are listed below, showing the event and deadline. Entries cannot be accepted after deadline. Registration will be at the Chamber of Commerce office, Sacajawea hotel, unless other wise specified in listing below. All Pioneer Parade elements . . . floats in organizations, busi ness and industrial divisions; marching and mounted groups: men's and women's individual costume divisions . . . register by 5 p. m. Friday, April 17. Pioneer Parade Junior division individuals, including boys and girls' individual costume contes tants, register at parade start, 1 p.m. Saturday, April 25, at Wash ington and Hemlock. Baton twirling competition three age-group divisions, 'entries closed. High school band competition for large and small schools, 5 p. m.. Wednesday, April 22. Drum and bugle corps competi tion, 5 p.m., Wednesday, April 22. Fast draw contest, junior and senior divisions, entries closed. Boys' pic eating contest, entries closed. Boys and girls' wheelbarrow race, entries closed. Mounted wrestlers contest, 5 p. m., Thursday, April 16. Horseshoe pitching accuracy contest, La Grande fire depart ment, entries accepted through Pow Wow Celebration, April 23-25. barbershop quartet competition, 5 p.m., Friday, April 17. Beautyshop quartets competi tion, 5 p.m., Friday, April 17. Mixed quartet competition, 5 p.m., Friday, April 17. Bushiest beard contest, 5 p.m., Friday, April 17. Fanciest heard contest, 5 p. m., Friday, April 17. Longest mustache contest, 5 p. m., Friday, April 17. Thit log is made up from information by Television Stations and its accuracy cannot be guaranteed by the La Grande Evening Observer. Gleason Levels Lobby Charge SALEM UPH Sen. G. D. Gleason iD-Portlandi has charged on the Senate floor that some Sen ate employes were lobbying mem bers of the upper chamber. His charges were quickly ques tioned and the employes defended by a number of senators, particu larly Sen. Jean Lewis (D-Port-landi. She said that the entire group of loyal employes should not be condemned for the possible act of one employe. ' " ' "Further." she said, "I know if any specific case of this type is called to the attention of the president of the Senate appropri ate action will be taken." Gleason declared that in the early part of the session some employes of the Senate had spok en to him regarding some legis lation and he told them this was against the ethics of the Senate. Since that time, he said, the practice had diminished but there was still some who persisted in lobbying practices. PERRY NEWS Mr. and Mrs. Wilby Cooper of La Grande were recent visitors at the Mr. and Mrs. Louie Greenough heme at Perry. Frontier Midway concessions and booths, entries closed. "Century of Dolls" exhibit, query Mrs. Ruth Webb, chairman, 16141s Seventh. Registration of dolls 2 to 5 p.m. April 21-22 at small ballroom, Sacajawea. Historical Relies exhibit, chair men, Mrs. I.ylc Fihn and Mrs. Paul Bull. Registration of exlii. bits 2 to 5 p.m., April 21-22 at small ballroom. Sacajawea. Historical Picture Gallery, chairman. Mrs. Eva Martin. Ex hibits will he received by Mrs Martin at her home, 1104 Penn mornings from April 6 to April 17, and 2 to 5 p.m., April 21-22 at small ballroom, Sacajawea. LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE TO CREDITORS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned has been appointed the executor of the Last Will and Testament and Estate of CHRISTIAN HILDEBRANT, some times known as CHRIS HILDE BRANDT, deceased, by the County Court of the State of Oregon for Union County, and has qualified. All persons having claims against said estate are hereby notified to present the same, du verified and with proper vouchers, to the undersigned at the office of his attorney at 6 Sommer Building. La Grande, Oregon, within six (6i months from the dale of the first publication of this notice. Dated and first published April 2, 1959. Date of last publication, April 23, 1959. WERNER HILDEBRANDT, Executor ROSS E. HEARING Attorney at Law 0 Sommer Building La Grande, Oregon Pub. April 2, 9, 16, & 23, 1959 NOTICE TO CREDITORS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned , has been appointed administratrix of the estate of Cassie F. Banton, de ceased, by the County Court of the State of Oregon of the County of Union. All persons having claims against said estate are hereby required to present the same at the office of Helm & Neely, West .lacobson Building. La Grande, Oregon, with proper vouchers, within six months from the dale of this notice. Dated at La Grande, Oregon, this Dill day of April. 1959. I.orna Baker, Administratrix of the estate of Cassie F. Bnntnn. deceased HELM & NEELY Attorneys for Administratrix West-Jaeobson Building La Grande, Oregon Pub. April 9, 16. 23, & 30, 1959 NOTICE OF HEARING-ON FINAL ACCOUNT NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lhat the undersigned, as the executrix of the estate of Nate Zweifel, deceased, has filed her final account in the County Court of the State of Oregon for Union County. That the said court has fixed Monday, the 11th day of May. 11)59, at 10 o'clock a.m. of said day at The County Court Rocm in the County Court House in the City of La Grande, Union County, Oregon, as the time and place for hearing thereon, and for the consideration of any ob jections thereto. DATED at La Grande. Oregon, this 9th dav of April, 1959. MINNIE ZWEIFEL. Execu trix of the estate of Nate Zweifel, Deceased. BURLEIGH & CAREY Attorneys for Executrix Pub. April 9, 16, 23. & 30, 1959 What's Good Word? Answer to Previous Puzzle LU achoss 1 i and Reck S A tall 0 the climax 12 Sncred image 13 "As I was Soinp. to Saint 14 Chemical suflix 1 5 Calm 17 Kncuuntcrcd 1 8 Fastens 19 Itusi-.in plains 21 Let it stand 23 Born 21 Uncle Tom and Little 27 Eucli.iristic wine cups 2!) Solar disk 32 Tell 34 irrce on 36 Asccnilcil 37 Austrian fil .'IH Without 311 K.xplclivo 41 Fish 42 Hearing organ 41 Afresh 4(1 Remark 4!) Wireless 53 Hail! 54 Haters 56 Number 57 War Rod 58 Scth's son (Bib.) 59 Tabic scrap 60 Bows' 61 Girl's name DOWN 1 SuKRcsliuii 2 Notion 3 VillliKO 4 Pixies 5 Sesame C I'arscc sacred writinRs tlXjUl.VKITl IglelNlol" XJE S. SfilE og A n G e Sju A p&ir- 1m A 5- c o x ?Xii ft i V an Egg I P. O K E f- . f5lE.EVE UEBDEK KjtT TtL TTJAN aIl-ItIeiki lNlEl-&mi.r 7 For fear that 8 German city 9 Vying 10 Toward the sheltered side 11 Favorites 16 Landed property 20 Tranquility 22 Impruve 24 Arcs 25 Very (Scot.) 26 StraiRhlness 28 Jewish month 30 Volcano 31 and far 33 Indian state 35 Saltpeters 40 Deserted (slaiiR) 43 Fortification 45 works 48 Roman consul 47 and under 48 Fiddling emperor 50 Sand hill 51 Wash and 52 Bones 55 Worm I 12. p 14 I h It 11 8 T I? I0 III m hi ""HiT TT w I'll itt - . - - 75 7 - .1'. , ?