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About La Grande observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1959-1968 | View Entire Issue (June 18, 1959)
1 '1 I.: QUI QUR WAY I rtk A I Y THAT W PIP VDU EVER SEE IWELL.THEV'RE LIKE AW ID "Wfctl I PRETTY rl A VOUN6 MACHINIST ) ACTIST OF THE OLt. ,1B!''T7 lA NEAR. KX HAMOIM1 AROMKIP 7 SCHOOL" IN "THESE 8--XLV'7 LIKE TH' MACHIMERVATA CWS OF P6MANP FEB tfi ATI CONTROLLER H PIOJICT THEV TELL SPEEP, HE HAS TO l7r V WE MAKE, KYOUTHISISTKA66 I SPENP TWO MOUTHS ' 17 lA V AIN'T lyfC OF TH' YOUNG MAM, J AAAKIW A PICTURE MTsyy I- V IT f --"-s. BUT I NOTICE ITS V. LOOK LIKE HE'PPOUE iv34fVl 7 WATCH "--v ALWAYS TtfOLP IT IN FIFTEEN MIN li"iSfSLJ I I (NOW- WATCH) BIRPS WHO HANJ)UTES-- SO THEV -"34iX-Isl V WHEN HE f AROUNP WORK sOTTA KEEPAHEAP 5i AjiA.J -I VCRKS rTi WHEN THEV AIN'TOF TH'llNaeiJyS, V.t S So -- WORKIN7 r-TOKEEPUPWITH . ' p'I THE STORY OF MARTHA . 1"' S WHO KILLED J'WOU OFFERED TO ' S yoOK AT ME.' WHAT HAVE I e f . fELVVMV0UW6--S.SELLMETHE "S. ;: EVER DOME TCOU? WHV J INiiSr 'V 5 ' NU I1 I MP THE MOnTMAETKE MT.f ItlillUm iff , Kill " wHUV l ftM BEFORE HE WA5 KILLED I L(!JJJ! -, Jl 1 .hJk'I'U" FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS By Merrill Blosser hmm -7 n i 1 v 1 I V ,i OM,AU- Ybu SHOULD KWOW ITS JUSTNOr J ESPECIALL SfJCE VOUR-NIGHT DATE (YAWN!)CcxeNTRATINQ " 1 RI&MT.' YOU CAN'T STAY UP CAIP... i . VVASNT WITH ME , e -S OM THAT WHITE UME SOKE J I'LL LATe AND WEM EX- , iflR-Wt MAxres we sleet-, rect To Go on A . Hf- i TVAueiiie j1- 4 P'c'C early thf V. F f nF-s i Pp ' ''l ' ' CAPTAIN' EASY By Leslie Turner POSSIBLY... BUT NOT THE NAME 1 1 NOR THAT n we MU5T CLOSE Te I I THERE'S A FLIGHT IM WEa BEYOWP WAORlPi I Of- THB IMPOVERISHEP SPANISH HE AGREED DEAL BEFORE SOMEONE FOUR HOURS'. WHERE ll'LL SHOW VOU ONAJ r THEN NEWS OP V GRANDEE VMHO OWNS ITt TO SELL, ir I FINDS WW. AND OUTBIDS WILL I FIND THIS JX WAP... JmWS'fl f THB PAlklTINQS B ., ... , ,, ,u,ir" TO VOU FOR USi EASY, WHEN CAM , 7 SPANIARD?! y0tJ V 1 J DISCOVERY WAY I i ' I '"II ' 100,0001 YOU OET A PLAN6-- i-wiTryTgg- 1-grV fi kNI i HAVE LEAKED OUT. A fi I ,; VfOR MADRID A1!, ' -Vi'frf-S7'Vl 4&F7' fi fn ALLEY OOP By V. T. Hamlin I I SUBSTANTIALLY, . . I I Oil WELLA I .TTN 7" S Afl I UNDER8TANP v THAT S IT ..BUT I iJXoS I ARE YOU Hi 1 . i IT, MMJACAK WALKEP HOW DO NOD V'"ttt7 . ACOUAINTED ANP SO ARE ) T"' V DOP!V OF ( INTO THE FIRE OF THI3 I KNOW SO MUCH i r ' WITH OUR J. VOU " . y'" 1T COURSE I GUN-HAPPY BULLY ANP ABOUT ITP -S jl MYTHICAL. f trt. kNOC.EP HIM COLPy' T OUTLAW? S J ' 1) ,f BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES - By Edgar Martin ' L I bvssasE. Wv- v"i -voe. -ve ,. I jJSasTI V II 1 VE. GV-Ct UEU. 3 'feCXCVi. Z2, lf"" ' ""' aujMf -in ',Z PRISCILLA'S POP v By Al Vermeer ; I '. ( VOU DON'T HAVE ) I ALL I WANT) I AND VH M WHYK c3 Yl V. TO BUY ME IS "S FOR OBEY VOUR CAN'T I A L HONEY "ANYTUIWfl V YOU TO BE FATHER r JUST GIVEy 3l I'VE 'vx') FM FATWER?! T A aOOU AND YOU A T(K I TOLD YOU ) 1$ VJT K rTXiJ I y T SWEET J ( MOTHER1) PRESENT J JaK VV- fi-IQ l,nmmQ.. BUGS BUNNY '. By J. B. William . WAYNE OUR BOARDING HOUSE 'WAOWV J WNll -LU 6NE) ISf THOSE AVSM With Major Hoople By Wilson Scruggs Georgia Lqwmaker Oppose Federal Integration Order ATLANTA I UPI I Georgia law. makers voiced opposition here to a federal court order directing trie Atlanta school bqard to prepare a plan for public school integra tion. The order set no deadline. U.S. District Judge Frank Hoop er specified that the desegrega tion Dlan must be readied "within Longview Girl Said Missing In Yokohama TOKYO i UPI l The U.S. Army has disclosed that the 14-year old daughter of a sergeant first class has been missing from her home since Saturday. The girl was identified as Fran ces McCann, 6f Longview, Wash. "Japanese and military police have been conducting a search, but without success," the Army said, "and are now enlisting the aid of the press in order to gain information about her where abouts." Mrs. McCann reported her daughter missing late Saturday night after thinking she had gone to visit friends, SFC. and Mrs. Owen ' F. Mc Cann live at the seaside Yoko hama military housing area. The mother said that when the girl disappeared, shortly after noon Saturday, she had about $20 with her. She said her. daughter stayed overnight with friends on two pre vious occasions but had informed her parents. Frances completed ninth grade at an Army-operated school in Yokohama this month and was described as a good student. Morse May Ask Boundary Change WASHINGTON UPI sen. Wayne Morse (D-Ore.) indicated Tuesday that he may attempt to have the size of the Oregon dunes national seashore area made smaller than proposed by Sen. Richard Ncubcrger (D-Ore.) The proposed bill was intro duced in March by Neuberger with Morse as co-sponsor. The bill would authorize up to 35.000 acres for the park which would include the dunes and sea lion caves. Morse said that he might have several amendments to offer aft er public hearings are held later in the year in the area. The sen ior senator indicated that he was troubled by discretionary author ity granted to the secretary of the interior in the pending bill. POPULATION AT 177 MILLION WASHINGTON I UPI) The Commerce Department estimates that the U.S. population has passed the 177 million mark. The clock in the lobby of the Com merce Department building post ed that figure at 3:11 p.m. e.d.t. Tuesday. The clock shows an in crease of one person every 11 sec- onus. DAILY IV LOG 2KREM y KXLY f KHQ TV f TV " O TV "Thursday 6:00 Newabent News & Sports Roy Itogrn 0:15 John Duly Doug Kdwarda . " 0:30 Leavo It To Beaver Invisible Man Front Pair 6:5 7:00 Sinrro , Jeff's Collie Dragnet 7:1S . " 7::ii) Ileal McCoys Derringer Too Young to 7:-t5 Oo Steady S:00 Pat lloone Znne Gray Theatre Sea Hunt R:l!i . " , . . 8:30 noiiKh rtlrfnrs riayhouae 90 Ernie Forfl 8:tS 4' . n:00 Man Without A Clun " You Bet Your Life 0 : 1 ! - ' .- . . . 0:30 Burns & Allen " Highway Patrol y :45 M . . m - M 10:00 Nifthlheat , 1 Jo lit Ventura Rescue Eight 1 0 : 1 S Jack l'aar ' ":3o " .. . Night Edition News l0:-r' Late Show Late Movie ":"0 . " , .. : . . , HI'. II:. Dateline Europe ' . . " 1 FRIDAY1 X:oo . - On. the Oo : Dough Re Ml 8 : 1 5 ' 1:30 Sam Levensoir Treasure Hunt 8:45 " !:oo I Love Lucy Price Ia Right 0:1 5 M 9:30 Top Dollar Cortentrstlon 9A& M 10:00 Love Of Life Tic Tao Dough 10:15 " . 10:30 Search for Tomorrow It Could Be Tou 10:45 Guiding Light 11:00 Across the Hoard Movie Queen FofNi Day 11:15 " - jj:30 rnntnmlmo Quit Haggis Baggie 12:00 MukIc lllngo H' A Great Life Young Dr. Malone 12:15 ., - ' 12:30 nomper Itoom As the World Turns From These Root 12:45 " " ' - 1:00 Day In Court Jimmy Dean Show Truth or Conseq. 1:15 " . . " 1:30 dale Storm Show . Houseparty County Fair 1:45 " 2:00 Heat the Clock Hl" Payoff ; Matinee on Blx 213 " ' " - 2:30 Who Do Tou Trust Verdict la Yours 2 ' i !i " 3:00 Am. llandatnnd - i11"'"'''" D'r " - Secret Storm s-'no " Udge of Night ' 8:45 " " Our Pang 4:00 Popeve Cliff Carl Bhow I Led Three Lives - 4:15 .. .. 4:30 " Early Show Four Thirty Movie 4:45 " ...... " 5:00 Hugn Runny " ' 1 . 5:13 " , i " . 5:30 Mickey Mouse Club " " 6:45 " Llte-O Front Page This log IS maae up rrom tnivrmiiian .m areuans ana ITS accuracy cannot be guaranteed by the La Grande Evening Observer, a reasonaoie lime." He said lie. would allow the Georgia Legisla ture time to study whatever plan is submitted before ordering it into effect. Hooper, in a final decree, said continued operation of schools "with discrimination as jn the past will not be permitted." Georgia House Floor Leader Frank Twitty expressed serious doubt that the Legislature would consider any plan that would al low a county to integrate its schools. " "I think the sentiment among the great majority of the mem bers of the Legislature is to keep the laws we have now," he said. Sen. Richard B. 'Russell urged the Atlanta school board to resist "this effort of the itinerant law yers of the colored people asso ciation." Sen. Herman Talmadge,' Gov. Ernest Vandiver and other state segregation leaders declined to comment, but Atlanta Mayor Wil liam Hartsfield said Hooper's rul ing allows "time for both the city and state to save our public schools." Hartsfield long has ad vocated a local option plan to meet the integration crisis. The judge said he recognized that the city is bound by state laws which call for the automatic closing of any integrated school. "Ia cases such as this a solu tion must be found for the par ticular conditions which exist," Hooper said. "This court feels that it should give the defendants a reasonable opportunity to sub mit a plan whereby racial dis crimination will be discontinued." Ten Negro parents instituted me integration sun nere a year ago, claiming their children were not permitted to attend schools of Uieir choice because of their race. Big Four Talks Fail To Bring Summit Closer WASHINGTON' (UPI) '- Presi dent Eisenhower said today that the stalemated Foreign Ministers Conference at Geneva has certain ly not brightened prospects for a Summit meeting. He deplored the factt hat the foreign ministers have been un able to make any headway in more than five weeks of discus sions. Eisenhower told his news con ference that Russian unwilling ness to negotiate at the current Geneva talks has dampened the possibility that a Summit meet ing would be a success. The President repeated that he was willing to go to a Summit meeting if the Foreign Minis ters' Conference made justifiable progress. Then he added that he certain ly was not going to indulge In prejudice or any preconceived no tion that would stand In the way toward making even a tiqy step forward in settling world problems. Observer, La Grande, Ore., ; Side XL 6-11 "You aren't, by happy chance, the boss's daughter?" Friend Confesses To Slaying Wife Of Man In Prison SAN QUENTIN. Calif. (UPIl- A San Francisco man was re leased Tuesday from San Quentin Prison, where he served six months for another man's crime. John Fry, 52, was sentenced to prison on Dec. 10, 1958, for man slaughter in the slaying of his common-law wife, Mrs. Elvira Hay. He said he was too drunk to remember what happened the night she was strangled, but ad mitted that he "could" have killed her. However, a resident of the hotel where Mrs. Hay was slain ad mitted last week that he was re sponsible. Richard T. Cooper, 32, a friend of Fry, confessed killing two women including Mrs. Hay. Fred Finsley, chairman of the California Adult Authority, said Cooper's confession was extreme ly detailed" and details which would have been known only to the killer were verified. Fry was given a lie detector test which indicated "beyond any reas onable doubt" that he was inno cent. The Adult Authority asked Gov. Edmund Brown to pardon Fry Tuesday, and the governor or dered his release. Fry left San Quentin with a new suit of clothes, $40 and bus fare to San Francisco. Under state law he. may file a claim, not to ex ceed $5,000, for wrongful impris onment. NEW TRANSPORT ARRIVES SMYRNA, Tenn. (UPI) The first C-130B prop jet combat transport plane was delivered to the Air Force here Monday by Lockheed Aircraft Corp. The four engine craft was the first of about 75 on order by the Air Force, Coast Guard and Marine Corps. Globe Trotting ACXOSS . 1 ' Vegas, Nevada 4 Grand 8 Product of Pennsylvania 12 Old French coin 13 the way 14 Italian river 15 Tavern 16 Residents of Western Hemisphere 18 More stern 20 Auctions 21 Donkey 22 Song for one 24 Night birds -26 Antitoxins 36 Romanian coin (var.) 37 Fragrant Jj plant ' 39 Pastries 40 of Capri 41 Footlike part - 42 Blarney 45 Browned bread Sf 49 Baffle 51 High note In Guido's scale 52 Toward the sheltered side 53 Heraldic band 54 Edge 55 Nick & 56 Oriental $ rulers x 57 Plant juice DOWN 1 Hawaiian wreaths 2 Skin disorder 3 Idaho resort (2 words) 27 Males 30 Most wart 32 Whole 34 Thoroughfare 35 Handsome man I Z Fj 1- 1 t ? 8 3 10 l p ""Irs -i" JA iM m ifiy c . - . try !" L.zzrr "H 1 I FPr" tZu Thurs., June 18, 1959 Page 10 Glances - T.M, Ref. U.S. pat Oft r 1 by NCA Scitic-e, Ine. Newspapers To Resume Publication SAN. JOSE, Calif. (UPI) -The San Jose Mercury and News, idled by labor troubles for 123 days, made plans today to resume op eration. A management spokesman said it was impossible to say exactly when the 108-ycar-okl newspaper would begin publishing again, but he expressed hope that it would be next week. 'The lengthy labor dispute ended Wednesday night when stereoty pics reached agreement with the company. The group was one of three involved in strikes against the newspaper since it was closed down on Feb. 14. Stereotypers and the pressmen's union stopped work on that date. The pressmen later agreed to terms, but the American News paper Guild representing edi torial employes went on strike when its contract expired on May 1. During most of the strike, I he guild published a newspaper called the San Jose Iieportcr. The guild unanimously approved a .two-year contract covering its members Tuesday night. Then the stereotypers reached agreement with the company Wednesday morning and accepted the agree ment by a vote of 38-3 Wednesday night. The stereotypers were earning $113.05 a week when the strike began. Under the new agreement, they will receive $4 weekly retro active to March, 1958; another $3 weekly retroactive to December, 1958; and an additional $4.05 week ly in December, 1959. That would bring their weekly salary to $124.10. Answer to Previous Puzzle CiCia.1 a tpAN l ahp J E gEL PUA I NO rTTltl A E P irr3 y -l s ite s cS BEVEL. EC J? E g.1 1 A. U B B N O gJZ 5 J E P I EH T O TIE 2!- Tiue pA"e1 eJ-E ace? SSj EESne 3 : 4 Boxes 26 Rob 27 Clergymen . 28 Great Lake 29 Cape 31 Twilight 33 Drinks heavily 38 Go to bed 40 Place within 41 Leaves, as of a book, 42 Food fish. 43 Story 44 Portent 46 Single 47 Pseudonym of Charles Lamb 48 Moist 50 and reel 5 Crippled 6 Opposed 7 Mai de 8 Tropical tree . 9 Kind of examination 10 British princess 11 Deprivation 1.7 Cuba, for instance 19 City in fc Germany i 23 Mountain nymph 24 Gem 25 Vacillate ft ', .-t tvl - . . - 4VlZll,::