Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About La Grande observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1959-1968 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 30, 1959)
i i 5 1 1 OUT-QUR WAY K,.i ,1 -, 4,5 r til IVW OvMALI t ...uu'lH HIP " " ' " r " ' : w f PI 5" "S'.'.rr1.. oviaAit .mxptg .L,,, '1-' .jg M-ain 'M r ........ ' 'T3?.l w-.p- fHE STORY OF MARTHA WAYNE By Wilton Scruggt I 30N-nELLV.6V0UWEKE6OW6 1 I THOUGHT VOO WtKt'iOW iOULO I J f VOU EAU AWAV FKDW HOWE, BUT "1 1 -s. 10 LEAE WITHOUT SAVINS Jm A?LEEf JEITMEKOFUS I I LUKEt? YOU HECE. AMD WOWVI r ,1V soeir mk?A &oodbv to me torf y I a vi 9 sieep,billv? r we both have to ius the 1 wuvs,mi'M6aus Vr-w1- 1 J -J, ll NE'"B B0TH BEEN Vm rm-rl- MWicJ T HOWE.' " 5JilM THOUGHTLESS S H U f T VrirH i FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS By Morrill Blowf 'J33Tirr7i 'u7 - I domt ur V itL be "1 I woKrr care 6osm. is 'uh - hum "all tou ( km- wuh i) ByjJbTrV COoT'MES VfftFFK ttXJRSELF VtRV WHAT HE HAVE T& SAY ABOUT" IT? HARMLESS BL?HIS CW -I GET INVOLVED-1 OFMSH CLAIMS ID 7T' siwr chatter 35 S22!S.M'S MYe,- -'l 1''- you OFritoy ' c CAPTAIN EASY . , By Ltlio Turnor 1HIS5 SuKKE MILL CU ANV igTll-L UNPER JU5T A 1 TKOUiMT lAjtWl ItlSPECtDR.T CHAP t AHO SLAKE JUST LEAWEP X 4 MOWEWTTO RtPt'ST, OLGA. "HYPNOSIS, NOT0NE (lWKKl I W-OCK 6AV HE AW BUKKf IM COBHAIA THAT 0N6 Of If HER MMORAj WE HAVE 20 MINUTE TO AX.6 ENNV CHEOM F uT CALL AND TELL I W W TlMU AT NOON ON HER ALI WTNf HAS WAS (5000, Zl -TT OUR TRAIN I V" "ER ACCURAC t HIM nE.UL J Qmte 71 (4 THE DAY 5HE CLMAW SEEN DC AD A IA0NTHI CARBON COPY HA I S-rTi.r- A ftWAiJDli I S PROUP Of WE J3 fV"6 C0EHAA- IT PfcCRECTTS HER UB ALL ZB DATA AAV VTA, I A ,fCie"fl u- li6 I ,--- PET8CT0R TEST! WE UST ALLEY OOP ' " ' . " ' ' By V. T. Hamlin G"'i;jlliS6iiVLju I 6D3 MXJ TO I I .. SAiWAYS BETTER J I I ? I PsCKAY, GENTLEMEN, ) . (I K .CONSIPERTHIS L TBE SAFE THAN y . '"r!? ' S I THERE'S NO HURRY.. t AM I 60 TELL THAT LEMIANIMOST TARE- Kp . 50KRY r- i ?f f JAXE MDUR TIME y' ' 0 J LOUSE I'LL HAVt NO 7FULLY.YOUR f "iTtTT i , " ? ; J ITr Kf : part of his silly ( HifiHNESS., W fl TM VL. rr vw ri mm M$m m mi fflm AUuia hhu ncK euuvfici By Edgar Martin . . i ii ! I J s PZ . W A' T AS "ft i V ' Mil attf V . A S 1 ' ' I I T ' i ; t TSk ilk I N J L J 1 . . . I VtVAV L I j t 1 " j fKnuLLMt e-OK By Al Vorm-'r IT Com so now) I P you two! you'll II pERyA2S.iifr -v J YOU'RE t ndwallto the) N2'I?iATr ) I THIS IS THE-N rXCGANGIN,aJft) ?POOI? FARM.'j- -(TO eO&YBOATf BUGS BUNNY ' (i ouess si I I ( wmere s s-e?' If-etunia ras OutVCJAS jQ" - v vciCEW.r -! og 5A anp seecs Vrrrr-CTr- - SSS. Wli. VOU ) N: r- ts-V V -V V ASHOVETOTmAT al l-S.P VE GIT A J A ' W0n ? GmT. V V CTATiOM I H.Jf Williams I mi - I aw. ui avi rtv s.'li l.l ""'- . ! "I'TVIIM V ivlpfM.lPlKU III i V IO ' r 1 I OUR BOARDING HOUSE -VJ OOVjM OFF THAT PlM .-.J tlVt.'AND t.,r.E - If . W Hfe t ju With Major Hoopl, CLOUDA , vfrltcDAV T' 1 HANfc U-J. lUATT HAD I : V..- , y : I ' -y " Syndicated TV By Co-Star Of HOLLYWOOD 'I PI1 wni-n is s'ar not a star? When he plays the loal i"1' 'a tynclicated TV series. Syndication means the sliow i not shown on a neUurk, but suU individually to lal stations throutihout the country at different time slots, on various clays and dissimilar sponsors. In the acting f-a:ermty stars ot such programs are considered al mcst second-class citiu'iis. The pel formers on syndicated lion's beiiin to brood a:id complain aVu ut their lot. Such is the case wilh Jim Davis ho co-stars wilh Laig .leifne; In an adventure series about fire men, "Rescue 8." Di'fwa.ict Exists There's a difference between syndicated and network stars, all right," he complained. "You sense the difference in the industry and among people in general." Davis is a big- rough-hewn char acter wilh a mop of hair and a deep-timbered voice. Under no cir cumstances could he be consid ered handsome. He is something of a syndication two-time loser. Be ore joining Rescue 8, Jim starred in "Stories of the Cen tury." another snydie. The bigshots sort of consider us a nondcscrit group, ne con tinued. "And wc re treated like poor relations." Other Factors Cited Other elements affecting syndi- QUOTES IN THE NEWS United Press International NEW YORK Rock V roll disc Jockey Alan Freed. 38, who left WNEW-TV by "mutual agree ment" in the middle of the "pay ola" fracas, saying goodbye to his teen-age fans on his final show: 'The people I dig the most arc you. We know we are more adult than adults." LONDON Lady Churchill. speaking to Sir Winston as he glumly entered the living room of their Hyde Park home to pose for his 85th birthday picture: "It won't take long and it will be quite painless." DAYTON. Ohio Air Force Capt. Joseph Kittinger, retealing that he "goofed up leaving the gondola on his 15-mile parachute leap, causing the drug chute that should have stabili.ed him to cpan early and foul:' '' At i that i moment I knew it was going to be a long way down. but 1 still felt I could make it." KANSAS CITY. Mo. - Former President Truman, stating that President Eisenhower never con tacted him about a proposal that Truman accompany Eisenhower on the President's forthcoming U nation tour: 'I never heard from him." DAILY JV LOG 2KREM a KXLY r KHQ TV TV O TV MONDAY :00 Superman Nwn. Sports Movie (i.'ont.) fi:15 PniiK Kdwnrda Kront Pane S :30 Newabeat Amos n' Amly t it " Nile- Newa 7:00 Man Without a clun Oinnon Hall Itcscue Kipht 7:10 Chpvpnno Mas'iuirnito Partv Whlrlyblrdi 7:4S " 2 S:0ft " The Tt-xan Love and Marriage :1S R:30 Ttourbon St. Iti'at Fathrr Knows Itpat Taloc, TVoll Karso 8:45 " 0:00 " Ilanny Thomaa IVtn flitnn (1:30 Artvrnluroa In Aim Southern Alma Theatre !M. Parailine " " 10:00 " llenneaey Mike Hammer tO:ir. " " " 10:10 Camera Letctive June Ally.son New 10:41 " " Late Movie tl:00 Niirhtheat 4 Jnt Feature lt:l.' Jack Taar U:J0 " " . " 11:45 " ' TUESDAY 8:00 c'ont. claA.irooin t:lS 8:80 t'iilverltr lYoflle TllnB Done School 8:45 ' S..1IB Shop " :0 "T;7TT:..w'e Iiouirh Ite Ml :15, !:30 On The Co Treasure Hunt :45 " " 111:00 I Love I.liey Trice la lUgM 10:13 - " .0 30 neeemher rirlile Concentration iO:45 " " 1 1 00 Love Of Life Truth or Conoeq. :t:U Trevlew 1 - " 11:30 Komper Room Search for Tomorrow " CnuH Be You 11:45 " Culilir.it l.leht " 12-00 Ilestlesa dun ' It's A itreat Life Lun For a Day 11:15 " " " 12:30 Love That Hob Stage 4 "he Thin Man 13:45 " " 1 :00 Mualc Hlii(IJ Take 4 Young Dr. Malone I -SO Song Shop An the World Turn From These Roots 1:45 " " 2:00 Day In Court For llettur or Worse House on HiKh St. 2 1 5 " " " SO dale Storm Show tlouseparty Split IVrsonallty 3:45 2 - VOO Heat The Dock Millionaire Matinee on Six 3:15 " " 1 30 Who no You Trust Verdict Is Yours 3:45 2. " I 00 Amcrl.an llan.-tan.l HriKhter I:iv " 4.J5 Secret Storm 4 JO Topeye F.da-e of Night " j', ,lp7 Pilnt-O-rete ;, (I0 Kamar Fi" " v'lock Movie fi ', 1 5 " " -. 30 nin Tin Tin It. .bin Hoool 5:41 - This log it mad up from information by Television Stations a accuracy cennot be guererrteed by the .La Grande Observer, Scries Rapped 'Rescue 8' c; led programs are the budKet. la'-k 01 publicity and the fact that they fiiecedc and follow local shows across the country which do i nt d aw many viewers. j "We're a bud'jet show," Davis aid. "We c'.on't have the money i :o throw around that the network, rrrgraivu do But there's one hi udvni'tage. We never worry about ; the show being cancelled because of sro:sor ca'.celliitio.i. j "if oie s;jorsor drojw us. the; other:; still are around to dra.v upi the slack until we find another, ne.v check R 'abhor." Chuckles In The News United Press Intemationil SANTA LOSES GLASSES MKMI'IIIS, Tenn. H'PI' Three-year-old Ruth Waters, on her way to see Santa Claus, took no chances that she might get so excited she'd forget what she wanted to .say. She brought it in writing. Huth came up to the jolly gen tleman and handed him a slip of paper with his name on it. St. Nick frowned sl'ghtly and beck oned to Ruth's mother. "What does this say?" he whis pered. "I left my glasses at home." COUNCIL TAKES HOE BISHOP'S STORTFOItD Eng land iL'PIi The town council Friday Uok a hoe to sloppy gar deners. It said if weed-infested gardens aren't cleaned up within a week, it will either have the job done itself and charge the tenants or kick them out. BRUCE MOURNS SCOTCH PFRTH. Scotland I UPI -"II was a terrible sight," moaned Robert Rruce after a fire broke out in the garage where he work ed. A truckload of Scotch was in the garage, and 6.000 bottles explod ed from the heat. SOUR MILK CASE HARROW. England (UPH Bernard Leslie Davies, 23, was arrested Friday on a charge of stealing two pints of milk. The milk, although recovered, gave authorities a problem. The police constable asked the judge if he could dispose o.' it belore it went sour. Davies sug gested he "drink it." No immedi ate decision was reached. :' BOY ARRAIGNED : ATHENS. Ala. i UPI i About uwi spectators Friday watched the five-minute arraignment of a young Negro charged with raping and murdering an elderly white woman. Joe Henry Johnson, 17, waived a preliminary hearing on the charges. Officers claim he ad mitted raping and killing Mrs. Dicie Boyd. 63. and Sfverly beat ing her 88-year-old mother, Mrs. Rowena Bryd. Observer, La Grande, Ore., Side Glances fin 1 !' T.M. R. U.S. Pat !. t IM tr NEA fern:. In. "I'm trying to work up a mad spell, Cwen. It seems too bad to put cracked plates in the trash can without smashing them!" Touhy Accuses 'Barber Jake' Of Book Bootlegging Tactics CHICAGO i UPI Roger Touhy. three days out of prison, said to day John Make the Barber Fac tor is making a "book bootlegger" out of him. A lawyer for Factor said the publisher of Touhy's book would be sued for scandal, libel, slander Six Demo Presidential Hopefuls Set WASHINGTON UPD Six Democratic presidential possibili ties will be on display at a series of party huddles in New York Dec. 5-7. The Democr.'.tic get-together al so will produce a "state of the union message" recommending a program for the 1W0 session of Congress. The double feature will be of fered at a meeting of the Demo cratic -Advisory Council. The cli max will come at a fund-raising dinner Dec. 7 honoring Mrs. Elea nor Roosevelt. Among the dinner sneakers will be a number of party leaders viewed as probable or possible candidates for the 1M0 Democrat ic presidential nomination. These include Adlai E. Steven son, Sen. John F. Kennedy Mass.'. Sen. Ruber: II. Humph rey 'Minn.', Guv. Edmund G. Brown 'Calif.1, Gov. G. Mennen Williams 'Mich' and Robert B. Mcyncr ' N.J. . The only con-pic'iou- absentees from the field cf Democrat c pres idential prospects arc Sen. Lyndon B. Johnson 'Tex.' and Sen. Stua't . Symington 'Mo. . Furniture Designer ACROSS 1 Furniture designer, Sheraton 7 He was Stockton- on -Tecs in 1751 13 Creeping 14 Interstice 15 Speaker 1G Cornea - opacity 17 Distant (comb, form) 18 Doyen . 20 Present menth (ab ) 21 Ot greatest depth 23 Striiie 2fi Sen bird 27 English tesliv.il 30 Texan shrine 32 Depressing 34 Being borne 36 Vegetables 37 Pigpen 38 Otherwise 41 Suffix 42 Lubricated 44 Love god 47 European mountains 48 Ballston, for instance 51 Stay 53 Typo face 55 Stupor 56 Dyestuff 57 Separated 58 Digging tools DOWN 1 Horse gait . 2 Present 3 Jewel . , 4 Encountered 5 Cathode's opposite 6 Thoroughfare 7 Flags 1 K 13 U. 5 6 I 7 3 19 JlO 111 112 ii - 14 ; is - rg trf-fW-,, -nsr-ff- 121 22 . 23 2 125 j 126 27 128 129 50 : 311 ' 32 33 31 ST) 36 37 j J8 39 140 41 1 '7T 44 aTIT" j J47 I 43 49 50" 51 52 53 34 55 55 57 ST ' 1 i m i srstirr. !' Mon., Nov. 30, 1959 Page 6 and invasion of privacy. Fear of this suit. Touhy said, has caused dealers to put the book under the counter. Touhy charges in the book that Factor faked a $70,000 ransom kidnaping in 1933. The book it titled "The Stolen Years" and de tails Touhy's long fight to free himself from the sentence he got for kidnaping Factor. Touhy served 25 years and 9 months in Stateville Penitentiary and was paroled Tuesday. He is in Chicago, where once he ruled as a prince of the prohibition-era underworld. Factor is in Los Angeles. Throughout his imprisonment Touhy charged he was framed. His book quotes a 1934 ruling by the late John P. Barnes. U.S. dis trict judge, that the Factor kid naping was a sham. Joseph E. Struetl, former as sistant U.S. attorney, told United Press International he would bring suit for Factor against the book's publisher, Pennington Press of Cleveland, Ohio, charging scan dal, libel, slander, invasion of privacy and contempt of court through misuse of Barnes' deci sion. The suit, Struett said, would be brought In federal court here in about 10 days. He said the amount of money to be asked has not been dete" mined. Factor's lawyer has sent letters to retailers, warning that the suit will be filed. Some book dealers, it was reported, had removed the book from their shelves and pur chasers had to buy it clandes tinely. "Factor is making a boollegser cut of me. I guess." Touhy told the I'PI: "A book bootlegger, that is. But this time I'm not violating the law." Answer to Previous Puzzle 8 Happy augury 8 Bit a second time 10 Part of speech 11 Ailments 12 Tidy 19 Imitator 21 Half (prefix) 22 Cobbler (dial.) 23 Conflicts 24 Dismounted 25 Knight's wife 27 Encourage 28 Native of Latvia 29 Gaelic 31 Heavy blow 33 Recompense 35 Gathered 39 East Indian -timber tree 40 Discerns 42 Cede 43 Bar legally 44 Crafts 45 Guasa 46 Tentmaker 48 Slipped 49 Evergreen 50 High cards 82 Frost 54 King of Judah Ie!c!uI icbiMixi FT v ar TC i jElul t a n o E tU foftiEiOjOlN I AN g'EjME& e'pMcigluTls g t N AM W B R E H SIMIE T 5TT" pjuierggjA Vr Ejg glAlTlElulsMM E A T ER e v lb Wain t b u P3 1 11 E m'E" U B A ame 5" aB t a o T T E.D gl R l S Jc g U "iC aiai 2.5.2. c oSb Wjo s y i$'e:r INIUIT 1