OJT OUR WAY By J. R. William ncFP Mib' -.7-.., IS s. i Y flu fl)M NOTICE V MO ' ?. .4 HOW MUCH BETltR 1 NO" -" UN PER TH' SHAPE )l IT ! V- A TRBES ALONG 1 PE .7 . - , 7 ". - rs. ? .f"'- " a?"'' K""' hadt- tliNr N , J'.TK"r.'..J OUR BOARDING HOUSE With Major Hoopla ; W,COCNBL,SL'KS: VYhE-AD IS THRCSBiNiSY : KS A FKOS'S THROAT. &JTv7V.E2 AH--MV ' OTHE? INJURY IS MUCH LESS WNFUL.WHEN I'M STAND: r rAp,v,Ei? tittle srky to .-iCXTEN- TlVISSS S VlSIT- auspicious.? '': H it's aTI ii HE'S WC33LIER I BL1T T I THAN A KSW A THIN 1 7 thinks vjuvjuz: J going tc I ' THB0N5 i -f r-'n I L --V-V.V'V-'-- AT LAST WILLIAM EWALD SAYS: THE STORY OF MARTHA WAYNE By Wilson Scruggs (lMlMltKWhWiaHIM I - " nice more? jntpn unpe. 1 t'u&-ipi7V t ua unsurvc)! II M! II LESSLV INCOMPETENT AMD BUT TO ,v i j - fffi? ' s-7' MOW WEtE LIABLE FOKTHBI C FKEyCXlWf $ i7lf xl H l Pi JWi." ( SSX f CUSTOWE DKESSVOU VT X V II I Ur4!"f FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS By Merrill Blotter Z -VI'LL AfTtuWE HEAT ITASAW I LARD.' LOOKCXirrWeU.(WMAT5 MORE IMPORTANT rTUo WAS.r FOR. THAT WAVE MEcy MOf 006? CAPTAIN EASY By Leslie Turner I OKClA.CALLEIt01 T VOUR I I 9H0JI.P VOU NOT HAVE A W6 PO NOT I I 60 EV LEFT TOWM. TOfjy.. TOO I AH ALMOST Un- TIMBi WY FPlBMO, H6 FtEU BETTCIt TOLD THEM VOL) CAMN0T7KH0W THAT VEl TO PAY THE INNKEEPER RELIEVBi MV yAOl05,SEM0' t-w ALRtADy: y r PRIVEPABLOf r rCARLOTAi ALL WUCH LE-5S RAISE Y 601 6 PEAR1, 1 WAMTED W WE OVERTAKE YOU if'-- f i-rl, -,. ' I IAY LIFE I HKVE -rr J55ES- , Wl YOU TO HAVE- ALLEYO ""SSLTJI 1 1 . BUT WHERE S THE ' I FINE WELL. WE CANT L-1- -YEH. LET S Sfcb I I " t HEST C EM.. AMPTME OF AFFAIRS DO k TMIM3 OM OH' OOP 'F WE CAN T I ' OOP SURVIVCO THE THE W AGON OI8L NOT THIS IS' UNTIL WE i3ET MUST HAVE I PlCK IT UP' ft ii I TORNAPO ALL RKaMT. ANO THE I A TRAC A BSTTEH irEA I (OTTEP -JIKffr' LOOKS PRETTY eOU?. iTJ, OF HE Tl ) S CTHE' A iOMETHINkS! ) T WM, II . .f V TitREP. tholish yvr;i4 sithsr; i y I 6ituaton bs . ji BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES By Edgar Martin "XW5. (.V tUE- UVTCW VtWU VOW. -K5A'CL "AAAiQ,c, AUNXV btX2CjUfi.'? u H a. II 1 AViV mms . TVr '"" r-?H ' 1 K VW) I V- PRisjys po " ' ' By Al Verwr r A C3UYl- t-. J I YOUVE aOT I I i THAT'S ) S T3 - - ( WASN'T A ) "Xfrv I TO GET OUT IN ) f f YsWERES NOTk . CHANCE 7 V I THE DEFDr- ' -l.1HF Big BUGS BUNNY I fowl FlXIN' A FLAT 0n) t - - f v THIS ftjSV STREET ?T , . s?Zf COULO SET ME -.'r." -2rl I wVV ,CUBEBC? AN' BUIN 5 55v ""Sf Sf jfjil." . jy ouasATwEy Baseball 'Rerun' Offers Good Idea For Summer TV By WILLIAM EWALD UPI Staff Writer NKW YOliK iL'PH K it only logical, in a summer freighted with TV reruns, that NUC-TV should offer a rcjicat of the All Star baseball game. Monday, a Rroii') of gentlefolk from the National and American Leagues reenacted an excrcis? originally presented on July 7. The cast was changed somewhat notably missing on the National side were two skilled performers. Orlando Cepeda and i William White. And the point of ongina tion was shifted from Pittsburgh to Los Angeles, but that's only fitting since almost all network television is moving to the West Coast anyway. However, there was one rather striking innovation in this repeat A change in script. In the July 7 original, the Nationals, won. Mon day, the Americans won. In a way, the idea seems like a dandy solution to the problem of sum mer repeats and I suggest other TV series might adopt it if Peter Gunn and Marshal Dillon and Wyatt Earp were to lose all their winter gunfights during the summer, it might add some tang to the schedule. As for the game itself, an nouncer Mel Allen described it at the close as "a game fraught with excitement from start to fin ish." This, of course, was a kind of commercial and like most com mercials was somewhat overly enthusiastic. It was, as a matter of fact, a pretty dull game a little less stimulating than a crocheting bee. There seems to be a kind of con spiracy of silence about baseball with nobody quite willing to ad mit that it's The Great American Bore. It may be the only sport in which fans derive their chief enjoyment not from the tedium of the game itself, but in wallowing in marginalia about past proceed ings hugging to themselves ob scure statistics, collecting .quirks of performers., engaging in unin formed discussions about the mer its of players. On television, the game is less than satisfactory. TV offers sec tional baseball its canvas dis plays only partial glimpses of its complex actions like the hit aqd run, the double play, the base hit with men on. One typical example: Monday in the seventh inning with An thony Kubck on second and James Runnels on first, Nelson" Fox singled for the Americans. The camera showed the ball stithcring toward the outfield, picked up Kubck as he planked the run and then switched back to Fox roosting on first What was missing was the mer ry-go-round itself: The complete picture of the ball being retrieved and thrown, the defense realign ing, the runners scooting. It struck me then that looking at baseball on TV is a little like try ing to watch a tedious war through a keyhole. Th Channel Swim: "The Moon and Sixpence," an NBC-TV soe- ci.il which stars Laurence llvier has been shifted from Dec. 10 to Oct. 30. NBC-TV is preparing a daily fashion show for its day time schedule it'll replace one of the three shaky shows on the daytime docket: From These Hoots, Court of Human Relations or County Fair. Monique Van Vooren and Hans Conned will star in "A Taste Of Champagne" on CBS-TV's U.S. Steel Hour Aug. 26. Lloyd Nolan will guest in a CBS-TV Father Knows Best episode next fall ti tled "Bud Plays It Safe." Westinghouse will sponsor the Democratic and Republican politi cal conventions and election night on CBS-TV in 1960 for the third consecutive presidential election year. Lana Turner is ticketed in for the NBC-TV Milton Ber'le spe cial Oct 11 Danny Thomas also will guest on the show. Richard Diamond, Private De tective, currently seen Sundays on CBS-TV, will switch to Monday nights on NBC-TV starting Oct 5. Richard Boone, star of CBS-TV's Have Gun, Will Travel, will direct an episode, "The Campaign of Billy Banjo," for the fall series. NBC-TV's Cavalcade of Sports will cover the middleweight championship bout between for mer titleholders Carmen Basilio and Gene Fullmer Aug. 28. Rockefellers Are Preparing For Wedding SOGNE, Norway (UPI Steven Rockefeller and Anne Marie Ras mussen announced today that they will be married here on Aug. 22 despite a teachers convention which threatened to leave no rooms in local hotels for the Rockefeller family or other wed ding guests. The American "prince" and his one-time kitchen maid "Cinderel la" made the announcement at a brief, informal news conference in the road outside the Rasmussen home. He did all the talking at the brief meeting, which consisted mostly of a picture-taking session for still cameramen. Motion pic ture cameras were barred by Stephen David, the press aide New York's Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller sent to give his son a hand with his unaccustomed publicity. David said the ban on movies was at Steven's request. SHUNS SANITARY SEWAGE TAMPA, Fla. (UPI) Louis N. Drahgon quit after working one week for the Bureau of Sani tary Sewers. His boss wrote on his brief employment record: "Tried, but just couldn't work with sewage." DAILY TV LG I .... v ... ... , y 2KREM m KXLY g KHQ TV . . TV O TV TUESDAY 4:00 NVwuhent NVwn Sport Grav Ghost :1S John Duly Doug Kdwarili " K:3 Susnrfout SpnrtKtimn'x c'luh. Front Page S:S " W hri.-Kllf Show " 7:0') " December llride Steve Canyon 7.1S " - 7:30 Wyatt Earp To Tell the Truth Jim. Rodgers Show 7-4.-, "i . . 11.00 rtiflfiiian IV. V. Tad Ulrl Loml llnxi'hall K:l. " jn Kakril City KiMiMiRht 1-iayliiHiw !:00 Alcoa. Pros, ills Tn.lv William " :,s ' " Slinw -9:n Twenty Six Mon :45 - , 10:0(1 NlKhlheat Mk-ht K.llllon " 0:V. Jack I-aar 4 M..-1 Kcnlure 10:30 .. N'pwa "l:"' - t.ale Movla 11:00 7, 11:IS " . 11:30 Channel 3 Theatre m -11:4S " - WEDNESDAY i :00 On Tho 140 DmiRh lie Ml HIS 11:30 Sam l,evenann Treasure Hunt : " - :(" I I-ove Lucy I'rice la night :1T. " :30 Top Dollar Concentration :4S " in.M " lve Of Life Tic Tac Dough 10:15 " 10:10 Search for Tomorrow It Could Be Ton 1:4t C.uidina- I.l-lit , " 1 1 :! Krema K itinera Coffee Club Tliealre Uueen For a Day 11:15 " " 11:10 Pantomime Quit Court of II Ii " ' Human Uelallona l!:O0 Muale Illngo A Great Ufa Young Dr. Malone l:IS " " " . 11:30 Romper Room . At the World Turns From These Roota ll:4 " 1:04) Day In Court '"r Heller or Worm- Truth or Conaeq. IIS 1:30 Gale Storm Show , Hou-eparty County Fair 1-45 " " ' 1:00 Beat The Clock H'g I'ayoff Matinee on Six 1:15 " 1:10 Who Do Tou Truat Verdict It Toure 1:45 '; 1:00 Am. llandatand Itnahter Day S-15 " Secret Storm m S JO " Edge of Night : J Our Pang 400 Pope Cliffy Carl Show I Led Three Lives 4 :S0 " Tea Time Matinee Four Thirty Movie 4:45 " : Joe I'alooka' - 5:15 " fc f : Mickey Mouae Club " 6:45 Kiintley-Ttrlnkley Observer, La Grande, Ore., Tue., Aug. 4, 1959 Page 6 Side Glances W -If T M. f . 0 1. Pet Off. Q r (Q 1tS tf Mi A lerrtet. Urn. O "Good you're home early! We need somebody to settle our argument about the Middle East!" 'PETROVITCH' SULLIVAN OPENS HIS MOSCOW SHOW By ALINE MOSBY UPI Staff Writer MOSCOW. (UPD - Ed "Petro vich" Sullivan, speaking haltingly in Russian instead of English, opened , a Soviet tour Monday night with a gala premiere of a variety show staged as part of the American Exhibition here The show was approximately the mixture Americans are accus tomed, to seeing on television jugglers, pretty singers in tight, low-cut dresses, a contortionist and a magician, among other acts. Ballerina Nora Kaye and oper atic soprano Rise Stevens, sing ing "Getting To Know You" in Russian, provided a spice of cul ture to the bill. An audience of intent, smiling Russians applauded every act, al though in some cases it wasn't certain that they got the point. The turns they liked particularly were called back repeatedly for bows. A critic for the official Tass agency said the audience "ac cepted the performance in a very warm, friendly manner." Sullivan's show, specially tai lored for Russian audiences, is scheduled to play two weeks in the outdoor theater in Moscow's Gorky Park. He plans also to play Odess and Tbilisi before returning home. The TV master of ceremonies. whese father's name was Peter, adopted "Petrovich" i Peterson i as his middle name for the dura tion of the tour. A Russian's middle name cus tomarily identifies him as his fa ther's son. i j Sullivan delighted the audience I by introducing the acts in halting I Russian, a languase he learned during a recent three-week stay in Las Vegas. "I was the only person in Las Vegas studying Russian roulette," he quipped Monday night. Thit lug It marie up from information by Televitinn Stttlont end IU accuracy fennel be gurntetd by the li Qrnd Eveninj Qbtervtr, In addition to the Misses Kaye and Stevens, hits of the show in cluded dancers Marge and Gowcr Champion and a team billed as Janik and Arnaut featuring a girl contortionist who coiled around her partner like a snake. The Barry Sisters, in white dresses so tight they could hard ly walk, drew gasps of delight with a jazz version of the Rus sian song "Dark Eyes." Seismograph Records A Strong Earthquake BERKELEY. Calif. (UPD A strong earthquake believed to have been centered in western Nevada was recorded on the Uni versity of California seismograph here early today. However, the Washoe County sheriff's office in Reno reported that the quake had not been felt here, nor had any phone calls been received from persons who felt the temblor. Seismologist Don Tocher said that the earthquake's eniccnter was about 240 miles from Berke ley. He said that the temblor be gan at 12:37 a.m. and lasted six minutes. It registered an intensity of 5.5 on the Richter scale, ac cording to Tocher. HARRIMAN LAUDS NIXON NEW YORK ( UPI i Former New York Gov. Avcrell Harri man oraised Vice President Rich ard M. Nixon Sunday for stand ing up to Nikita Khrushchev in their public debate at the U.S. Exhibition in Moscow two weeks ago. "I was glad to see that hap pen." HaTiman, a former U.S. ambassador to Moscow, said on a television program. "Mr. Khru shchev has gone around the world boasting about a lot of things, saying a lot of things against the United States, and I was glad to see him 'called' by an American." Certain Sports Answer to Previous Puzzle ' ACROSS Baseball club Allot Expression Measure High cards Successor Moral wrong Mot worthless Inner Heraldic bands Anger Cry of bacchanals Be defeated Revise French Island Temper, as steel Feela Battle between two Hateful Superlative suffix 37 Horsen:cri use it 39 Otherw ise 40 Food regime 41 Uncle Tom's favorite 42 Bird 45 Grnup of eight 49 Trey 51 Particle 52 Morays j . 53 Country If 54 Province (ab.). 55 Golf mounds 56 Small children 57 Born DOWN lFish 2 Melody 3 Lawn sports equipment (2 words) 4 Dulr finish 5 Unbleached 6 Matched P C A,i&;gi aTI 7 Suffix 8 English county 9 Knob 10 French river 11 Bits 17 Showed contempt 19 Fifhu.R equipment 23 Cup part 24ChntKe 5 Burucn 26 S!:p :.vay 27 Solitude 28 Romanian coins 29 Essential being 31 European clover 33 Fist (Brit.) 38 Ideal state 40 Garment 41 SulTlxes 42 Printing direction 43 Pronoun 44 Heraldic band 46 Rope 47 Musical quality 48 Grafted (her.) 50 Defeat a card bid 1 I F H 7 4 7 I 8 9 I0 ll ii Tf i3? 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