The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963, September 21, 1959, Page 8, Image 8

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    O
OUR BOARDING HOUSE with MAJOR HOOPLE
OUT OUR VX&
8 The Bend Bulletin, Montfsy, Sept. 21, 1T5?
ThjD tffireSl &r8 ended
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FAS U-ito an;
unreal characters
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THAT P4V- LO. f- otfiV Ijtmim HAVC A " v 'f"1
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STEVE CANYON
CICK TRACY
U'L ABNER
BEX MORGAN. M.D.
CAPTAIN EASY
&$x!M.i') I IkS, nlrf soubms pialep toe ni'mmz in chicaotYcol.canvcn)
I S-J" ' 5-Jy3' nuwbek in Chicago is a pay telephone in ahatdovdu
LYTUEEEKA NEWTa-HJCTl AMP SENT A SEKIES A A BOOTH WHICH GIVES 1 THINK?
'P7HT COPPER CALHOCLS , IN A COPE WE HAVEN'T 4L- Vi Tf? c Ml 0fe' i WpJ.
u i J.J',lf."JUJ"j J J .'.',"" 'J W CERTAINLV SHAJJ, VISIT I F NOU LOOK LIK6 THE KIND
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43TTVANK NOU. MRS. HOAO I JUST AS SOON AS I i PURTY, IF VOU JUST HAD A
T FOR YOUR KIND INTEREST V CAN GET OUT. y fB VLITTU FLESH ON YOUR
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y IDF TTI WATTU 1
MATTY MUNKIE TV SHOW
TONIGHT. LIZZ 15 CjOINO TO
V BE HIS GUEST S
his guest;
mi I ia ff ISSH
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HIM THROUGH.'
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By Fred Daniig I tally. Red's opening ihow on
UPI Stiff Wrlttr Tuesday, Sept. 29, will feature
NEW YORK iLPK Tile new Errol Flynn.
ABC-TV drama series. Sunday ABC radio's Peter Lind Hayes
Showcase, made its debut Sunday and Mary Ilealy are en route to
niqht and served up sundry men- Europe to tape interviews with
tal cases. various stars in the major ipi-
In this play by S. Lee Pogostin. ' tals. Maureen O'Hara will be Cliff
"People Kill People. Sometimes." Arquetle s first guest when he
Geraldine Page and Jason Ro- J launches his ABC-TV show. Char
bards Jr. portrayed a marriage- I 'cy Weaver's Hobby Lobby, on
on-the rocks couple of unlimited
wealth. She was in love with her
p.-vchiatrist and living on pills
("pcople pill people, sometimes I
and he was in love with a blonde, , set for Friday. Oct. 16. Although
played by Nan Martin. The mar- j Leo Durocher and NBC have pai t
riagc apparently was cracking up led company (was he pushed or
because of mutual disinterest, for- did he jump?). Leo will take part
gotten tenderness, boredom and in NBC-TV's World Series special
starved egos.
The drama comes when a prowl
er the outside force enters
the house just after Robards has
told his wife he's getting a di
vorce. Miss Page shoots Robards
not really by accident, it seems
but is acquitted. While free of a
prison term in her husband's mur
der, she is destroyed by her guilt.
Pogostin tells us that each of us
shares in the guilt, in the final
analysis.
This rather soap-opera-like story
was clothed in some stiff, allegor
ical language during the first act.
The agonizing, puerile dialogue
gave the four principals snobbish,
unsympathetic veneers. Samples:
"I want to go out and hang my
self on the highest tree." "Wit is
a means by which we civilize
people." There was a reference to
"the book of St. Freud" and some
half-hearted chit-chat about de
signs, or lack of designs, in life.
Because self-concious, strained
repartee sandbagged the first act.
later attempts to get solid ground
under the characters were to no
avail. They started out as unreal
types and ended the same way.
1 want to credit the actors with
fine performances, especially Ro
bards and Miss Page in the "1
want a divorce bedroom scene."
Director John Frankenheimer's
iiui uuiiii r I iiiiriiiiciijiri s
, , u i j i ,u
of clo.seups helped make the
scene a technical triumph.
Mv dlsannointment in the n av
iltn F hcn I IncconoH mv onthiici.
am Snr Ih. nnonti,! nf Ih. i
series, however. This one may
well turn into another Playhouse
90. Do we call it Plavhouse 60?
Friday nights NBC-TV hour.
America pauses in September.
followed the usual outdoor format
of this seasonal series, but made
some careless uses of pre-recorded
music and pre-recorded laugh
ter. Art Lmkletter was an adroit
head-patter; Julie London moved
her lips to song again. From the
standpoint of originality, the best
sequence involved closeups of ex
otic birds and flowers during Mar
tin Dcnnys group s performance.
Tht Channel Swim: Sir Ale
Guinness, Ralph Bellamy and
Gwen Vcrdon are the latest addi
tions to the one-hour "Tribute to
Eleanor Rooseelt" on NBC-TV
Sunday. Oct. 25. Previously-an
nounced appearances will be by I
Arthur Godfrey and Maurice Che-;
valicr. i
NBC-TV also is getting a later I
visit liy Red Skelton. The CBS-TV
comedy star visits the Dinah
Shore Show on Nov. 22. Inciden-!
6 no
6 is
1I
15
W cflthf r-Siwirt-.New
rvii K'livarii. Newe
Name That Tune
6 koin ' XI IUTV 8 K'
t harltp a Cartoon
Oreem Journal Nrwi
Che.fnne
7 m
7 1J
7,:ul
lit
The Tesan
Fattier Knowa Beat
a rwnlier Justice
Joafr Otten Show
rainomina uiux
Early Movie
Eettr.r to Hti'nty
Jure A!l""n Show
li
10 00
Secret Journal
City r
Sh-tln-
11 00
11 IS
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8 AS
un Ine Go
Sam Levcneun Show
AbMtt and Cottelk)
frie Chart'ea far
I Li Lucy
Top Dollar
Loe ol U:e
in is
10 VI
SeA-vn tor Tomorrow
GTrt '-a l'C.t
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Amot A Arwly
Acro5s the
Pantomime
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Dr. Cnruuan
At Woria TXima
Mua.c Bluo
Ufa of Riley
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Dayjn Court
Gale Storm
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4 00
It
Aft
Forballar or WorAe
Car.x Time
Three Atooiee
Adsnrure Time
i Wednesday, Sept. 30.
A revised one-hour version of
j the NBC-TV Project 20 documcn-
, tary, Life in the Thirties, is now
: on Sept. 29.
Barbara Wittmer
wins 4-H honors
Special to The Bulletin
PRINEV1LLE Barbara Whitl
mer, a seasoned 4-H club live
stock showman, emerged as the
all-around champion in the live
stock show manship contest,
at this year's Crook county fair
which ended yesterday afternoon.
Miss Wittmer took top honors in .
showmanship, exhibiting a lamb
before she was named best 4-H
showman. ;
Other winners and their categor
ies were Gary Timmerman, Pow-
ell Buite, beef; Bruce Chase. I
swine; Sheri Graves, horses, and
Jerry Simmons, dairy cattle.
The top all-round FFA showman
was Ronnie Gross who exhibited
both sheep and dairy cattle.
Porflander gets
rDD,e nwnrA
'-"sm
PORTLAND (UPIi An Ore
gon Journal reporter, Watford
Reed. 35. has been named winner
t ,i- t n j
of the J300 Bar-Press award for
. . , :
ouistanuing newspaper writing on
a subject in the legal field.
Reed analvzed the federal
- '
r0,e SyStem h'S "'""'"S
Winners were announced Satur
day at the Oregon Newspaper
Publishers Association conference
of editorial writers at Timberline
lodge.
Honorable mentions were
awarded Ann Sullivan, Oregonian
reporter; George Castillo, Rose
burg News-Review; and Eric W.
Allen Jr., Mcdford Mail-Tribune.
PREACHER USES PIN-UPS
BIRMINGHAM, England (UPII
The Rev. Nick Siacey, a former
British Olympic track star, be
came editor of the Church of Eng-
land's Birmingham Christian
News and pushed its circulation
from 1.000 to 33.0OO.
But his parishioners don't like
the way he's done it. He prints
pin-ups. "We can foresee the
time when he will be using pic-
tures of mrdes." complained Mrs.
Edith Ricli. a local churchgoer.
Stacey responded "I shall con-
;nnue to use pin-ups wnere approp-j
' riate. After all, 35,000 people
can't be wrong." j
New Beat
Huntley-brinhley Newt
Waiulerlusl
Loe A Mamae
lal.-t of Wella rargo
I'eler Gukji
Alcoa Theatre
Arthur Murray
U. S. Marshall
Niaht Beat
hhruthchev. 5. Franciaco
.lark rear bhow
Follow That Man
Nihuap Final
PToeram PreMew
T""!! aTl C'UTry
Touay
Help Wanted
Price u Kiiht
Concentre dort
Tic Tac Douih
It Could Be Yoa
Bard
One
Oueen tor e Day
ftonoer Room
Youra Dr. Maione
From Thete Roota
Truth or Conaequancaa
CourT Fair
Clock
You Truat
De-uah-Re-Ml
Treasure Runt
BahdatAnd
woody HSmdpecktf
3 :
r
l
j --""',s' " $k
i- u.s. pt f.
"Don't waste your time on him! He's got all his money
tied up in a piggy bank!"
Peace Light Motel lined up
for Russian journalists
By Merriman Smith ,
UPI Stuff Writer
WASHINGTON IUPH- Back
stairs at the White House:
During the Camp David meet
ing between President Eisenhower
and Soviet boss Nikita S. Khrush
chev late this week, there will be!
quite a housing problem for re-'
porters covering the conference.
The White House has a spot ten
tatively lined up for the Russian
journalists outside Gettysburg, the
Peace Light Motel.
Khrushchev will have a lovely
guest room at Camp David in As
pel Cottage, the President's house,
but the ever-serious Russian se
cret police might be a little puz
zled by some of the furnishings.
The chairman of the Soviet
Council of Ministers will have a
cherry yellow bathroom yellow
tile floor, yellow bathtub, yellow
curtains. On the wall there is a
small, gleaming sjjver button.
The Russian agents undoubted
ly will want to know what hap- j
pens if Khrushchev pushes this'
button. Here is the answer: With-:
in moments, a navy steward will
arrive with an armload of fresh
bath towels. ' ,
The staff at the White House
noticed several small details of
Khrushchev's appearance last
week that most American specta
tors may have missed. For one
thing, the Russian Premier has
unusually tiny feet for a man of
his girth. His shoes seem to be
made of leather so soft and thin
it might he used for gloves. 1
Halleck would
accept GOP
V-P nomination
WASHINGTON (CPU - House
Republican Leader Charles A. Hal
leck is available for the I960 GOP
vice presidential nomination.
The M-year-old Indiana con
gressman nolcd Sunday that "you
don't run for vice president" but
said he would answer "yes" if
the parly's presidential candidate
sought him for a running mate.
H.illcck. who scored a near
miss in a bid for the vice presi
dential nomination in 1913. made
his present position clear in a tel
evision interview with Rep. Peter
Frelinghuysen Jr. iR-N.J.l.
Although the choice must he
ratified by the convention, the
presidential nominee usually se
lects his running mate.
Halleck s political prestige has
been climbing sharply since last
Jan. 6 when he took over leader
ship of House Republicans by
ousting veteran Rep. Joseph W.
Martin Jr. (Mass.t from that post.
1'.
hswisie V'l
POMClHl-l rHOIIKAM
t aa-,Tohn Paty
: llio Moj.-?ulncy Howe
fi -op.j, p(,
J OO l .q PW
'f fl rt ;;h Mrmortrl
' 0O-Bat-dsta-.1 V.ioc & ,
n f.-iia
A-T M T N.e
I.A.s Farm Re.n-r
I n,Fra- H-.T-.ay
1 IS i. n-iri sieve 's Xeue
7 .ia-m..-:-, R,.unau
( On TTfT -!
S IS Nr:e: Nes
S 7vH'-or R.-ll ot Musle
a fv-i;. j.t:Ti F.ard
a ASH,--cr Ro;i of St'J.'0
sn T" S-jt i T'e o-ar
9 15 T'P Turei. Neva
10 OftH--or Foil of Music
;o '.s Te::o Test
10 nHo-or Roil, y.,e,
10 40 Man Anout Toon
10 IS s.ctr, rh R:m
U fti Mainly tor Women
IMS Home FurnlAH'i-at Show
11 -W H"vir Ron s.-.s
11 00 N.vw.time Me'.M.ea
lr.lO-TMavs A:LecUi
IT IS Srta R,w
It N Sea I
12 AS Faroier s H.ur
1 OS South Titrd S'ret Show
J oF.v cden Minulee
: osVsjV Ln Mut:e
: s Pre-ew in Readt-e. 'Sew
5 ooM-nc in M;. c. ee
4 10 Nirt-we't Sns
4 :s F-A-V He-.r.ay
4 0 Fa-a.V of Piattere. Rewt
5 :s-Lvl ewa
5.30 Parade of Piattere
Also, when Khrushchev walks,
there is sort of a paddling effect
because of the way he carries his
pudgy hands at right angles to
his sides. He moves his arms
somewhat stiffly and this adds
to the paddling picture.
Members of the Russian parly
say nothing has frightened the
two Khrushchev daughters during
their American tour quite as much
as the, rushing, clamoring theater
crowds in New York just before
curtain time..
They went lo see "The Music
Man" with their mother while
they were in New York last week
and the girls, both grown young
women, were highly disturbed by
the crowds swarming in the nar
row streets of tlie theater district.
Interestingly enough, the crowds
were unaware of the presence of
the Khrushchev ladies.
Chinese would
need Russian
aid on rocket
By Phil Newsom
UPI Staff Writer
FALSE FRONT
If Red China should as ru
mored send up a big rocket to
celebrate its 10!h anniversary
around Oct. 1. don't jump to the
conclusion that the Chinese Com
munists have a well-developed
missile program. According to the
best information in Asia, the Chi
nese Reds could launch a rocket
only with the help of Russia. As
one expert put it: "About the
only thing Red China would be
able to contribute would be the
land for the launching pad."
BIG BUSINESS
Italian slate oil monopoly chief
Enrico Mallei is rumored on the
verge of another hig deal. Mattel
is the man who broke the 50-50
rule dividing oil income between
the state and participating oil
companies but its nature still is
undisclosed.
PEACE IS RELATIVE
Foreign observers are applaud
ing President Charles de Gaulle's
new definition of peace in Algeria
fewer than 200 killed per year
in battles r street attacks. The
definition by-passes provisions for
truce talks, election of qualified
negotiators and all the rest. It
sets a rule of thumb that all the
world can apply. Dc Gaulle origi
nally planned to set the maximum
at 100. but was told that even in
pre-rehellion days, political rival
ries killed about 150 persons per
year. So he put it at 200. The
present rate is roughly 100 times
that much.
TRADITION
If the United Nations debates
Tibet, Nationalist China w ill claim
historic right to exercise political
control aver the strifetorn Hima
layan religious state. The Nation
alist government will not admit
that Tibet should now be given
sovereignty even to rid it of Com
munist control. Instead, the Na
tionalists will cite President Chi
ang Kai-shek's March declara
tion in which he promised Tibet
self-determination when and if the
Nationalists regain control of the
China mainland. The Nationalists,
not unlike the Communists. Ion?
have claimed Suzerainty over Tibet.
MM
8 11
TTitt toe as mad
ae from Informal! feratAhod
hr TeatTtessai aaatloae e4 He
a ear I a net eSaM aWleaa.