La Grande observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1959-1968, July 15, 1959, Page 4, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    UT OUR WAY
By J. R.
Jj VOJ-dUY?- RITT 1 vii t.L I I v 7 MAS HB W IK' 1
nl GOAriEAP.'MVMA AVifit- wr 1 M-J'"1' MAM.' VOO Pi?M. 06
J SAYS 1 SOTTA ),'. HP VSX HAVr. KlliMI7PMVrAV.' IF I tv
3 CHAN 1H' 6ARASE i';, T A L Ml RF AW LABOR, I'LL WISH I
) AM SHE'S COMMA Id l-lvr YiJU I WAf- FIAHIM', AW I &OFI-.M
j RAV ME FOR IT--I A LIFT, A HO', It L WISH 1 WA4 BACK
WOULPM'T PRESUME .SP1 IT THE ( MtRE t ARWIM' AADWt.V
OVi OUR FRIENDSHIP 1 F'AV.AN... V , MAVKAU'TWIU
BV ASKPN' VOL! TO Pr-v -.-.-r V FER LOSIM'.'
HELPAAE OUT, SO , I T 0 Z r-vI
SO AHEAP AMD K ! TT
inFTnrr'l
Williams OUR BOARDING HOUSE
With Major Hoopla
l I? D JJ SAY VCJ 1
i ',',5 t- A6 JMae gjuy
-, -,jt testes? 6B
(IP
eiJL.VCJNS .MAM (?Fni?i H
, NOW VJl' MARCH IN
AlL HIM
THE STORY OF MARTHA WAYNE
By Wilson Scruggs
W7r WHAT DO VOU " S I f FIKST, ME5. WAYNE PKETEwPED ) APPARENTLY, THERE'S WO LIMIT TO WHAT JuMAK,'
MEAW?WHAT ) " TOeETlCKATMVKirN0S 71 SOSVWQMSN WILL PO TO CALL ATTEWTloioYOU
MOWeSTLV, CLAV, ARE ACS YOU TALK- JLi' ftt ( WOW THIS- PRACTICALLY THE OLD- -NTS -7. TO EMSELVES y-CAMT
YOU SUCH A FOOL AS J IU6 A&OUT, vL-- l EST TKUSlC IW THE WORLD.' . . - .Jyijfc. BE SERIOUS.'
FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS By Merrill Blosser
"'Sj&Jag-i" YtAM CUT MEV,' SMITH- iTbuT 1M A WAL, I'M RANCH WLIH? HOW CAAJ W'Tf 7
SaV, Smith -this ) its a pupe was Fixn' To QUEST foreman her, WHOOPS SPURS cause a( C ;a-u
HERE'S A DAMCE--S RANCH rance with here amo WHAT 1 SAY yTAKe YOU To BE A ) jlJl
NOT A GOL-DAN6 y DAMCE ---1 THAT 61- TV GOES ... INC LUPIN" ir WALLFLOWER. VUfNrTJ
. RODEO yVVAMNALCXX j--: 7 TtXJ TfJ ? -X
CAPTAIN ESY '& By Leslie Tomer
' 't f W WAIT' P0N AklTOWlOl IHA I I AHi SEmOR! Y OH. DEAR! IP 1 1 TAKE ME TO X NOTHING DOING Y YOU DO HfcR.
JLjri-l 6URE-(AtKEE WILL RAISE "Sl 1 COULD NOT I "AlKEE OOES, TOWN, T001 I STER1 YOU'VE THE GRAVE
y III HIDE EA5y HIS. OFFER FAR VlORS THAW I'LL CABLE TURW THAT I'aA SDWKl WV MUST CASLE JPOUBLE-CROSSEP INJUSTICE,
f WONEY WHERE HE'S N- , 458! v-.-H 'ti HIW T0 SEwC L P0WN1 ' CLIENT WON'T MV CLIEWT! ME FOR THE 5EN0R1 AMY
I ALREAPV SEARCHED. V T'T' TTTPir'i ANOTHER KSE HIS BID -LAST TIME 1 y WAV, CABLE
V HE WON'T FIND IT IN U 'JTA J, Vvt?V 5,0O01 ' V ADWE! t,lr?"S OFFIClr IS
.wiP
ALLEY OOP By V. T. Hamlin
ICS.. AND 6ETIINi IT AW, I DON'T THIMK -."-J NICE SOI MQ, OOP. )
L- INTO THAT WIAfiON I IT U. BE TOO BAD. A iA EASY DOES IT '
A T"6 WEIGHT OF IS iNG lO Bt 7 ALL WE LL NEEDS A V. NOW.' 'T''VN "N.
- . f THAT NLKJGfcT 19 ) A FANTASTIC rOFEW (3000, 5Ta6 Qxlr-. is V f
BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES ' By Edgar Martin
A i js I Ov... II v...L-oi'A 1 1 vt; csolvstoD -Q Ni
,MCiiWNAO...'?..?CAb ...?... y?VA....TVX Wb bCi VR..V.. .
WcCfto.., - .A I cwe P'"J L
PRISCILLA'S POP By Al Vermeer
I IT U 7 I "I lMOM SAys eveRY girl I I i gueSs1 fr
U L 1 BECOME BEAUTIFUL I - ' (NOBODY EVEN )
PRISCILLA, DO ) k J WHEN SOMEBODYH (lOs ' V L T LIKES t
BUGS BUNNY '
iVAWNJ!.: I MUST HAVfV yWjV.f IS 1J f THERE'S 4 I ( WITH A BIT OF UJCkV I -
I OVEI7SL6PTA5AIN1 IS K COOK VER 1 EVERYTWYlM MUCH -i PERHAPS I CAN
B?EAKFA5T READy 0iW FER I VA NEEP... ITOOHlREO BREAKFAST IM I
C C GET 8USyiT0 PREBgE
,TRED DANZIG SAYS:
-Observer, La Grande, Ore., Wed., July 15, 1959 Page 4
Andy Williams Show Best
Of Current Summer TV
By FRED DANZIG
UPI Staff Writer
NEW YORK I UPI I Summer
TV has shown us just about all it
has to offer, I guess, so tins Is
as good a time as any to vote
for "best" of the season.
My vote goes to the Andy Wil
liams Show on CBS-TV. With two
shows gone, it is clear that Andy
has a show that is as informal
as Brittle Bardot's last beach
party. Also, it is fresh. It swings.
It experiments.
Tuesday night, for example, a
successful experiment involved an
Americanized version of a Japa
nese kabuki dance, in which Mi-
yoshi Um?ki sang. "They Can't
Take That Away From Me."
Not experimental but charming
nonetheless was Andy's duet with
Miss Umeki in "Getting To Know
You." The comedy highlight, to
my mind, was the brief bit by
mimic Frank Gorshin in the role
of Boris Karloff playing opposite
a recording of Sir Cedric Hard
wieke in Ibsen's "Enemy of the
People."
Actually, the show is two shows
in one. Andy features "The World
McKay Reported
In Fair Condition
SALEM I UPI I Former Oregon
governor Douglas McKay today
was reported in "fairly good con
dition" at Salem General Hospi
tal. He is recovering from a re
currence of a heart ailment suf
fered earlier this week.
Attendants said the 66-vear-nlrl
former secretary of the interior
spent a good night. He is still con-
lined to an oxygen tent most of
the time. '
McKav is chairman nf the II S
section of the International .Inint
Commission which deals with wat
er problems between Canada and
the U.S.
Cottage Grove Movie
Theatres Purchased
Jones Enterprises Incorporat
ed, a firm that owns a chain of
movie theaters in Oregon, and
who arc associated with Francis
Gruelich and the La Grande
theatres, have purchased the Ar
cade theater and Argo drive-in
at Cottage Grove.
Stanley Daugherty, who owned
the two movie houses and an
other, the Diane, made the an
nouncement.
The Jones firm also owns thea
ters in Eugene, Coos Bay, Bend,
and other cities.
ORBITING MISSILES
IIUNTSVIIXE. Ala. (UrU-The
Army Ballistic Missile Agency
said today Explorer I. the United
States' first earth satellite, would
continue to orbit until August.
1962. The agency said latest es
timates also show Explorer IV,
the second Army satellite still or
biting, will re-enter the earth's
atmosphere in September and
burn up.
of LP's," a segment that samples
some off-beat record albums and
finds song-and-dance inspiration
in them. It s a solid hunk of en
tertainment and deserves to be
preserved after the summer.
The credit for alt this goes to
Andy, who has a pleasing manner
and is a swinging, tasteful singer;
producer Perry Lafferty, director
Norman Jcwison, choreographer
Peter Gcnnaro. music director
Jack Kane & Co. They get my
vote and my thanks for making
summertime Tuesday nights one
hour of it, at any rate look like
fall and winter TV at its best.
Short Shots: Steve Canyon Tues
day night dealt with a crippled
jet that landed on a foam-covered
landing strip. Not a civilian in
sight, along the runway, though.
The Kingston Trio spanked some
life into the Jimmie Rodgers
Show. In the same show on NBC
TV, Jill Corey went sexy in a
torch song but still looked too
sweet for the role the mother
daughter comedy team of Betty
and Jan Rhodes was squeezed off
the Andy Williams Show Tuesday
night when the show ran behind
time.
Tht Channel Swim: An original
TV drama by S. Lee Pogostin
that David Susskind hoped to pre
sent as a DuPont Show of the
Month on CBS-TV now is sched
uled to kick off NBC-TV's new
Sunday Showcase scries on Sept.
20. Titled, "People Kill People
Sometimes," the one-hour drama
John Frankenheimer. The word is
that Susskind . relinquished the
property because his DuPont se
ries once again will stick to ac
cepted literary works and not at
tempt any "originals" in the
forthcoming season.
The rLCe. t announceme-.t that
Tony Curtis will star as Russ Co
lombo in an NBC-TV special drew
a groan from singer Johnny Des
mond, who claims that he owns
the rights to certain songs closely
identified with Colombo's career
and also has agreements with
various persons who figured in
the crooner's life. Desmond says
he will go to court, if necessary,
if his rights are violated.
Paddy Chayefsky's first TV dra
ma in four years will deal with
the beat generation and will be
produced by Fred Coe for Play
house 90. This same CBS-TV series
will present a musical version of
Stephen Vincent Bcnet's short
story, "The Devil and Dan'l Web
ster" in the fall, produced by
John Houseman.
Scssue Hayakawa plans to star
in a TV series, made in Japan,
called Files of the Tokyo Police.
Betty Mutton's new fall scries for
CBS-TV has dropped the title of
Goldie in favor of the Betty Hut
ton Show. Brock Peters, who por
trays crown in the film version of
"Porgy and Bess." joins Danny
Costcllo. Vivlenne Delia Chiesa
and Louise O'Brien on ABC-TV's
.Music For a Summer Night on
July 29.
V. .
CO-STARS Rock Hudson and Joan Simmons are in
Universal-International's production of "This Earth Is
Mine."
I
Ronald Culman favored a chauf-
Rock Hudson
Stars In Film
At Granada
Lovers of antique cars will have
a rare time watching them rh
This Earth of Mine," saga of a
California dynasty, which opens
U the Granada Wednesday.
In Cinemascope and Techni
color, the picture stars Rock
Hudson, Jean Simmons. Dorothy
McGuire and .Claude Rains.
Among the vintage cars which
will be seen rolling over the
dirt roads of the lush grape coun
try are a 1930 Packard Phaeton,
scores of model A Fords, a Dur
ant, an Auburn, a Studehaker
"Dictator", and a 1925 Rolls
Royce.
There's also the famous Horch
sports car which Rock Hudson
drives that was once owned by
Adolph' Hitler and is now the
property of King-of-the-Road Mu
seum.
Henry King, director of "This
Earth Is Mine." drove locomo
tives, then Stanley Steamers.
leur-driven Pierce Arrow limou
sine. Charles Chaplin a maroon
Harmon wilh white wire wheels,
and Gloria Swanson an aircoolcd
Franklin.
DAILY JV LG "
2KREM m KXLY x KHQ
TV f TV O TV
WEDNESDAY
:00 Fights N.-ws & Uportu Orflc-lal Detective
8MB " Dnuc Kdwards "
fi:.'! " CnHiiin :rief Front Page
fi:4." HemmltiKwny News
7:00 KeWKbrnt Keep Talking U.S. Marshal
7:15 " '
7:30 African Patrol Trackdowa Price Is Might
7:45 " ,
S CO Oule & Harriet .Millionaire Dave King
8:15
S:H0 Donna Heed Show I've tlot a Secret Bat Masteraon
:4S " "
!':(hi Accused t'.S. Steel Hour Thla Is Your Life
!:1!
9:311 Target " Wauon Train
9:45 " "
10:00 XiKhthoat NiRlit 1-Mlllon "
lii ir, Jack I'aar Late Show "
10:30 " " News
10:45 M " l.ato Movlfl
11:00 " " "
11:15
1I:S0 Dateline Europe " "
11:45 " " "
THURSDAY
:00 On The Oo Douffh Re Ml
HIS
:S0 Sam Levenson Treasure Hunt
:45
9:0(1 I Love Lucy Price Is Right
9:30 Top Dollar Concentration
9:45 " -
lo oo Love Of l.lfe Tic Tao Dough
o 15 "
10:30 Search for Tomorrow It Could Re You
10:45 UuMing Light "
H:o,i Acrou the Hoard Movie Queen For a Day
11:15 " .. " . .
11:31) Pantomime Quit Court or
11:45 " Human Relations
1 J 0,1 Music Rlngo P"n Smoot Younj Dr. Malone
..j,, .. Industry on Parade
lV JO Romper Room A" ,ho World Turns From These Roots
12:45 ; " "
1 :on Day In Court Forjteitcr or Worse Truth or Conseq.
I So Gale Storm Show -ltoueparty County Fair
1-4 5 " "
: oo Heat The Clock l!'K I'ayoff Matinee on 81 1
15 . .. ..
; 3o Vfhn Do Tou Trust Verd let la Yours "
!:4 5 " I
.1 00 Am. Handstand Hngliter Day
3.1s ' Secret storm
J: JO . ' KdKe of Night "
3:4 5 " " Our Clang
4 to Pope ye Cliff Carl Show I Led Three Lives
4 15 " " "
4 jo " Early Show Four Thirty Movie
4 45 " " " '
5 so Superman " "
ft 1 5 " "
CM Mickey Mouse Club Song Shop "
S:4t " IfiintleT-Rrlnkley
500,000 Visitors
For Centennial
PORTLAND 1 UPI 1 The Ore
gon Centennial Exposition had its
son.oooth visitor Tuesday.
A 3-year-old blonde from Salt
Lake City. Cristine Wangsgard,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Cloyd
E. Wangsgard, passed through the
turnstiles at the half-million mark.
The family passed through the
main gate at 6:30 p.m. with two
other daughters, Diane, 1, and
Lvnda. 5.
The Wangsgards were given a
special reception that included a
free dinner at the Centennial res
taurant, tickets to the Roy Hogers
show. Frontier town and rides on
the Gayway.
Wangsgard is a tax specialist
with Pacific Northwest Pipeline
Company. Said Mrs. Wangsgard:
it's the first time we ever got
anything free in our lives."
this Ion U nvstte up from information ty Tolevikion Stations and ite
(curacy cannot be guaranteed by the La Grind Evening Observer.
Side Glances
T M. ft. VM- Pet Off. T
1S fas tA I 4 b
1
"If it weren't for these pedestrians I could better my
speed around the course by half an hour!"
Planetarium
Answer to Previous Puzzle
f
ACROSS
1 Heavenly
body
S Constellation
8 Planet
12 French river
13 Bitter vetch
14 Exude
15 Dill
16 Weight of
Denmark
17 Unaspirated
18 Motive
20 Melodies
21 Lariat
24 Originate
28 Third largest
planet
33 Italian coin
34 Abstract being
35 Geraint's wife
in Arthurian
legend
36 Famous
English school
37 Capture
38 "Gallopirg
dominoes"
39 Card game
41 oia
42 Pertaining to
a tissue
44 Sociable event
48 "Shooting
star"
53 Martian
(comb, form)
54 Unclose
(poet.)
58 Hoarfrost
57 Give use
temporarily
58 Platonic
dialogue
59 Greek god
60 Wrestlers'
pads
61 Stripling
62 Saucy .
DOWN
1 Fly
2 Spike
3 Bewilttcred
4 Soaks flax
5 Highest of
Lcpontine
Alps
lull MIAI IMIAItti&l
UT El APEM LlA G I O
G A RLJC O S J LJT E?T
gH EKEI, S AIM peg
A L ATRr"A S I ATP5
R E DEAL- AT p- I ME
I PEAfTE KMIARgg
D A JT B O T IT f A
I ""T7 XX Ml5
AI&iPETkjP I KIEIRT TTC
& T AIT'EIH O O DTl I
e 1 WEnT h ue ogg.
6 Deviate
morally
7 Hops' kiln
8 Song
(tomb, form)
9 Prayer ending
10 Circle
11 Female
saints (ab.)
19 Seaweed
20 Tree fluid
22 Make
' enduring
23 Trial
24 Fish sauce
25 Cosmic order
26 Press
27 Capital of
Yemen
29 Scatters,
as hay
30 Distinct part
31 Fastidious
32 German river
34 Grafted (her.)
40 Enclosure
41 Measure .
43 Correct
44 Hand part
45 Range . '
46 Cleft . '
47 Foxes 7j
49 Pitfall
50 Ireland
51 Sheaf "v3
52 Balance ?
54 Lubricant
55 Genus of
meadow
grasses .
' ' Z I? 4 I 7 . jl 1 8 ? I0 l
1 i4 "
I iiE ii
it if p rrTi ) m pi )i
v iS Hi "
h? -4 ) u
1 H
'I'll I' I I Mill
.'s
'-'"""h'i