La Grande observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1959-1968, August 05, 1959, Page 6, Image 6

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    Q JT OUR WAY
By J. R. Willlami OUR BOARDING HOUSE
OH, TH' MO& It.
fax up
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WAMMO
WITH THIS
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THE VUORRV WART
With Major Hoopl. WILLIAM EWALD SAYS:
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TYPE- e-y
THE STORY OF MARTHA WAYNE
By Wilton Scruggt
UO, HO1. IMEAM VES. I WAV A rlWilSHEoV
Ss.-"-V"r I--t dAW'T IHEKYOIIAKE. MY K IS
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FRbCKLES AND HIS FRIENDS Byr
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Daddy fixed a rooa fc sce ir hi - R Shac w ' 1 iit'V . workshop really necessar f
IKJ THE BASEMENT FOR- 1 fo BEUEVE BAR. MMMl fr-VT-Txr- 1 , . r--, -i-Wi
ouR-DAMCNfi .pleasure, K!, EVERTTHIN6 fert fVi JJMjfT ''' 1 L I
CAPTAIN EASY '''' By Leslie Turner
VOU ARB A Y ITli,SEL.WVE I IF IT l& IM ORPEKi 1 RETUKMl I EVEN IF I GET THRU DfcRRO.tHM" BABE7 IF VOU MUST
;- P 1 7 OOUiTONY! F0B A FORALItVl WITH YOUR RECEIPT WITHIN TVvO WAV HAVE THE PAINTING AlREADV.IF yd WOZRV, LOOK.
" ITHEW rfisMINEi I WOW I TAKE YOUR, HOURS! CAN YOU KEEP Y0UZ5ELr SHE CONVINCED PON ANTONIO THAT JT AHEAD'. TAKE K'Y
: fr, . ' T. V w LA&Tf 7 CLIENT'S CHECK TO AWUSED 1IU.THEN? n ra-r I've GONE HOWE1. HAT, ANP KEE
'i ilr FL, tZA MV-BMJKIN i r I'LL ' t"t i-T'BWIEA0 M w!
ALLEY OOP - By V. T. Hamlin
' W I I ...SBM6 I'M NOT THONO- A, v I I ? N. 1 I I OOOLA! ) C
, (V " SURVIVOR AFTER ALL... YVv f Al I CV 1 3 VSV
J-'-T AHORSE1 - . MAVBB TH'RESTOF I Aj LV?' ALLEY J ; ' "
BOO IS AND HER BUDDIES
By Edgar Martin
. was
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PRISCILLA S POP . By Al Varme''
SKSHJiy'l ISME SAYS ALL TME Vl f"! .' 1 I MB AWt 1 WbY J
RAITS AND SOUIRR6LS VnJ OTSjIfp
.JVWiVSif fTELLl AND CHIPMUNKS IN Q Vjf V W , rfPftnn Pool
KNOWWWAT) V MEJ ,TME FOREST ARE ) f ' tA . 4rV" ,f
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BUGS BUNNY
yi - I fl HAPPEN T BE II fffY THE TIME YXI HITCH 71 fl 6ETTE NOT TAKE J
N ) SLK3MTLV OUT J A WIPe.YOOB A(?MS WILL ANY CMANCES . ..
I TOO CHEAP TO TAKE ) J ) v.O POU6H- BE TOO TlPEP TO j ' I AA PtTCHIN ' J ; J)
I THE ftj TO THe V SO WHAT? PLAY BALL ! N T PAY I sCI
Peck's Bad Girl Winds
Up After A Skimpy Run
NEW YOKK 'I'PIi - I'tt-k's
Bad Girl buttoned up its season
Tuesday night after a skimpy run
of three months. It went out in
a blaze "of gloriosky.
It's both bewildering and sad
that the CBS-TV situation comedy
should have elected to take the
course it did. On the planning
board, it held some promise: A
father who was not a bumble
head, a mother who was neither
a conniver nor anti-man, a cou
ple of children of only medium
loathsomeness.
But the series quickly aban
doned its ground rules. It wal
lowed in corncake, milling the
standardly limp essays of its
genre each week, frittering itself
away on fribble. Father became,
if not precisely a bumblchead, a
kind of cheerful collaborator in
idiocy, mother became semi-aggressive,
the children were con
verted into caricatures, the plots
crumbled in a thick dust of homilies.
Tuesday night's finale scraped
hardpan for the scries. It had
something or other to do with a
trcehouse and bird watchers and
building . inspectors and dissolved
in a predictable puddle of gook
and good will.
It just goes to show you that
everything will turn out all right
u you have faith. . . said one of
participants in part at the close.
Well, the principal trouble with
Peck's Bad Girl is that it lacked
faith. Fittingly, everything turned
out rather badly.
Short Shots: Tuesday night's
CBS-TV Andy Williams Show was
scrumptious job beautifully
mounted, crisply paced, deftly
performed. Some of its sequences
were stunners: A "Too Darn Hot"
number with Williams and com
pany, a "Banana Boat Song"
piece with the Baird Marionettes
and a fine swinging version of
"Anything Goes-' by Williams.
The NBC-TV Jack Paar Show.
with Peggy Cass and Cliff Ar
quctte on board, turned out one
of its better efforts Tuesday night.
The NBC-TV Jimmie Iiodgers
Show, beamed at teen-asers when
it opened last March 31, has shift
ed its character radically since
then. Tuesday night's episode was
pitched rather frankly at the mid
dle years set to the extent that
four fugitives from the Lawrence
Welk Show the Lemmon Sisters
were mustered into service.
Th Channel Swim: Jerry Lewis
will star in "The Jazz Singer" an
adaptation of the 1927 Al Jolson
movie, in the NBC-TV Tuesday
night Ford series of specials.
Balph Bellamy. is a good bet to
star in "Thomas Jefferson." the
biographical drama special set for
NBC-TV Oct. 18.
Some of the shows on the plan
ning board for NBC-TVs Project
20 series this coining season in
clude "Mark Twain's America."
The Ragtime Era."', "Life In
The -3's" and "The Carefree
Years" the last
years Troin 1945 to 1950. The
Emmy Awards show is ticketed
in for May 12 on NBC-TV.
Dramatist Paddy Chayevsky.
who is scheduled to do a CBS
TV Playhouse 90, Is en route to
Russia he's expected to return
in early September. Sindlinfler
and Co., a research outfit, re
ports that radio listening sur
passed TV viewing in the L'nited
States for three weeks in July.
CBS radio will launch a half
h.bur daily panel show. Funny
Side L'p. on Aug. 24 with Robert
Q. Lewis as moderator and ller
mione Gingold, Parker Fennelly
and Kenny Delmar as plank-sitters
the show will be sliced to
20 minutes starting Sept. 28 when
a new 10-minute daily Garry
Moore radio show will take over
part of its time.
Dennis James will star in "Who
Was That Lady I Saw You With"
in Ephreta. Pa., from Aug. 17 to
23. CBS-TV's G.E. Theater will
kick off its season Sept. 20 with
"Miracle At The Opera." starring
Ed Wynn. Sam Levenson, whose
morning show was recently can
celled by CBS-TV, has been invit
ed to appear on the CBS-TV Ed
Sullivan Show. Peter Ustinov will
write and star in an original dra
ma a 8 yet untitled on NBC
TV's Sunday Showcase next season.
Private Power
Consumption
Shows Increase
SALEM UP1 Average con
sumption for residential and rural
customers of five privately-owned
electric utilities in Oregon
showed an increase in 1958 com
pared with the two previous
years.
A Public Utility Commission re
port forwarded to Gov. Mark Hat
field dealt mainly with private
utilities which serve 84 per cent
of the state's users. 1
Average consumption was re
ported as 8,279 KWH for 1958 as
against 8.139 and 7,792 for 1957
and 1950.
Eleven municipally-owned utili
ties serviced 7 per cent of the
state's electrical customers and
16 cooperatives and four people's
utility districts furnished energy
to 6 per cent and 3 per cent.
respectively.
The average charge per KWH
fpr Oregon private utilities was
1.27 cents as against 2.53 cents for
the L'nited States as a whole. Av
erage annual revenue per custo
mer was $105.35 as compared to
$85.16 for the national figure.
OUT OF TUNE
COPENHAGEN UPH Two 17
year-old boys were arrested
Thursday for stealing two organ
pipes from St. Augustin's Church
to use for exhaust pipes on their
will study the motorcycles.
Obwrver. La Grande, Ore., Wed., Aug. 5, 1959 Page 6
Side Glances
v(i -J- T M. .t. Ki t. Pet- Oft.
yJr4j V. 1t bf NfA Servlee. IM.
"They offered me 20 bucks a day just to be myself, but
I said, 'Nope, I'll act or I won't be in it'!'
SPORTS HERO ROLL AGAIN
FOR NON-ATHLETIC TONY
DAILY JV LOG .
2KKfcM m KXLY x KHQ
TV f TV O TV
WEDNESDAY
:00 Fights V.-wa & Sport Silent .service
:15 " . Ilouir Kriwiirris "
" l.'plMln Clrii'f Front Paga
Hemmlngway NVwa "
7:00 Kow.'hcat KVi-p Talking U.S. Marshal
7:15 mm ,,
7:.H Arrlmn Patrol Trarkdown Prlrn la night
7:45 " " .
n-.Kit U.al ft. Harriet Millionaire IMvu King
n.ir.
11:3(1 Duhna Reed Show I've Oot a Secret Bnt Mastcraon
8:15
!:ln Aeeiise.l I 'in le Tlie.i I re Thla la Tour Ufo
J::m How To Marry " Wagon Train
!:I5 A Millionaire " "
l:(j NlKhthoat NiuM Edition "
I0iir Jaek 1'anr M"t Featuro "
I 1 : : 0 " " Xewa
10:45 " l.ate Movie
I I 00 " " "
11:1 " "
11:30 Channel 2 Th' iilre "
11:41 - "
THURSDAY
mi im Tim (io IioiiKh Ita Ml
a 1.1
SO .Sam levenaon Treasure Hunt
:45 "
J:O0 I t,oo Lucy Price la night
:15 "
130 Top Dollar Concentration
:4S -
10:00 Love Ot Life Tic Tac Dough
10U "
10:30 Search for Tomorrow It Could B You
U 46 HiliiUng I.lKht
II i.o ' Kremx Kaiuera ot'l' Club Thc.urc yucen For a Day
I,:,s " .. " . ,
11:30 rantomlme Quia Court or
H;45 " Human Relations
13:00 Mualc Illngo In Smool Younn Dr. Malona
ij.jn . Industry on Parade m
13 30 rtomper rtoom A. tha World Turna From Thaae Root
11:45 "
1 00 Day in Court r',ir t!'''r or Worse Truth or Conaeq.
Ill
130 Gate Storm Show Houeparty County Fair
t:4r.
"t 00 Heat The Clock Payoff Matinee on Six
1 15
S.30 Who Do Tou Trust Verdict la Toure
1:45 "
l oo Am. Handatand lirichter Day
J 5 " Secret Storm m
i id " KdBe of Night
1:45 " " Our C.atig
4 00 Popeye Cliff Carl Show I Led Three Llea
111 "
4:30 " Tea Time Matinee Four Thirty MoTle
4:45 "
5:00 Superman " "
5:15 "
510 Mickey Mouae Club Son Shoo
5:45 " " lliintlev-llrlnkley
By VERNON SCOTT
UPI Staff Writer
HOLLYWOOD UPI Tony
Perkins, an admitted non-athlete,
is playing a sports hero for the
second time in his career and
for the second time in a Sort
he's never seen.
Six-foot two-inch Tony began
work this week portraying a bas
ketball star. His. first outing as
a celluloid athlete was in the film
biography of baseball flash Jim
Piersall, "Fear Strikes Out."
Tony has never seen either
game played, and had never trod
on baseball diamond or basketball
court.
It's not that he's a lounge liz
ard. The slim, trim actor has
been too busy in other pursuits,
principally improving himself as
a performer.
Part of Acting
"Learning to handle these ath
letic roles is all part of acting."
he said during a Brown Derby
lunch. "So I've been busy work
ing out at the Warner Brothers
gym discovering what basketball
is all about.
"I spend about on hour and a
half a day dribbling, passing,
shooting baskets and going alter
rebounds. An hour and a half is
about all I can take. It's exhaust
ing. "I was amazed at the intricacy
and science involved."
Tony, who recently completed
"On The Beach" for Stanley
Kramer, is taking his chances in
"Tall Story."
Sports pictures, with a few ex
ceptions such as "Pride of the
Yankees," have bombed at the
boxofficc.
Busically A Comedy
"This movie is basically a ro
mantic comedy with a basketball
background," he explained. "The
emphasis is not on basketball, but
on the characters involved.
"I find it more difficult to pro
of a sport than into the charac
teristics of the person I'm por
traying. It's not easy to coordi
nate yourself into a relaxed, be
lievable athlete."
"After finishing this picture,
which Josh Logan is directing,
I'm going to do one for Alfred
Hitchcock," he said. "I need
strong directors to help me out
of my acting inhibitions. I'm nev
er sure I'm doing the right thing.
"This daily basketball practice
is invaluable for my own confi
dence in giving a convincing per
formance. When 'Fear Strikes
Cut' was released I received let
ters from ball players congratu
lating me on Hie reality of the
baseball scenes.
"I hadn't thought about it that
way, but an actor couldn't ask for
higher praise."
Michigan's Poet
Laureate Edgar
Guest, 77, Dies
DETROIT i UPI I Poet Edgar
A. Guest died early today at his
home here.
The 77-year-old poet laureate of
Michigan had been ill for several
years. His physician said death
was caused by a cerebral hem
orrhage. Guest, who has been called "the
poet of the plain people." had
been writing verses for more than
50 years. When he stopped count
ing in 1930. he estimated he had
written more than 30,000 poems.
His most famous book of- po
etry, "A Heap O' Living'," sold
more than a half a million copies
and resulted in a Detroit gram
mar school being named in his
honor.
Guest's verses have appeared
daily in the Detroit Free Press
for decades and he liked to con
sider himself a working newsman
jeet myself into the physical skiU rather than a poet.
Conveyances
Tint loj ii made up Itum Inlotmation by Television Station end 111
ccuiicy cannot be guaranteed by tha Ll Grande Evening Obnrvtr
ACROSS
1 Popular city
conveyance
4 Horse-drawn
vehicle
B Truck
12 Clemency
l.llloib
14 Humorist
15 Cerastes
cormitus
16 Pigeons
17 A'Uite
IB Miuguloid
2(1 Aliotmila
2 !Inr?e and
carriage
24 Solicit
Ii Deliver
28 VcVoal
3u Sntefiinan
34 N'.ir.iber
3f S'ar part
Mi Aci r.'.plishcd
37 Oic-k god
3 M;i? vt
41 lti:i s (ab.)
42 Nan-otic
43 Mead (Fr.)
44 Affirmative
45 Ciillcfcc cheer
47 Ciilhcdra
49 Ocean vessel
52 Noiseless
56 Ci'idilcss of
iniV.nation
57 Coalesce
61 Particle
62 Precisely
63 Musteline
mammal
64 Legal point
65 Sorrowful
66 Staggers
07 Bitter vetch
VOWS
1 Water
conveyance
2 Constellation
3 Month (ab.)
4 Indian brave
5 Sky god
6 Whitney's
invention
7 Bone (comb.
Answer to Previous Puzzle
in
lAlMiEl r-,..'.arM'5 "Sr1-
i i
n
t-W&W.Si?
form)
8 Lodgings
9 Vessel
10 Biblical man
1 1 Tidings
19 Measure
of area
II Pieced out
23 Expansion
24 Air raid
alarms
25 Highway for
conveyances
26 Nested boxes
27 Profound
29 Plant of
lily family
boat
32 Crafted (her.)
33 Promontory
38 Sudanesa
Negroid
4" Grcetcrs
46 Protection
48 Babylonian
deity
49 Pillars
50 Willow genus
51 Indigence
53 Sorrow
54 Pastry chef
55 Hardy girl
58 Summer Fr.)
fiu Koute (ab.)
31 Flat-boltomcd CO Coagulate
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