Salem, Oregon, Saturday, March" 30, 1957 f HE CAPITAL JOURNAD Section 8 Page 8 SATITRnAV nu irnui wir. accfdenrbHciJyheFrriend d-K" stru" to save Flicka when mUL"0,." Soid!rV F"r'"ne-Body planted in the London apart men of Tim and Toubo. 6:30 p.m.. The Buccaneers-A little old lady with a stolen treasure tries to hoodwink Dan Tempest. 7:00 p m Men of Annapolis-Drama relates to "off the record" tra dition seawall. " 9:00 p.m.. Gale Storm Show-A Swedish gymnasium operator de cides she wants to marry Cedric. 10:00 p.m., Gunsmoke-A jealous cowhand slain and evidence labels deputy as the killer. 11:05 p.m., Showtime on Six "A Mid-Summer Night's Dream" star ring James Cagney, Oliva de Haviland, Victor Jory, Dick Powell. Mickey Rooney, Anita Louise. SATURDAY ON KPTV: (27) 5:00 p.m., 5 O'clock Playhouse "Trade Winds" stars Frederick March, Joan Bennett, and Ann Sothern. 8:00 p.m., Perry Como Show Guests Julius La Rosa and comedy team of Rowan and Martin! 10:00 p.m., George Gobel Show Guest is comedienne Mary Mc Carty, hired as George's cook. SATURDAY ON KLOR: (12) 4:30 p.m., "GOG," stars Herbert Marshall and Constance Dowling. 8:00 p.m., Joe Palooka Knobby, Joe and Ann are trapped by crazed gunman. 6:30 p.m.. Stars of Tomorrow Uncle Nate features the Ponsomby quintet from Azalea. 7:30 p.m., "All Through the Night," starring Humphrey Bogart, Peter Lorre. . 00 p.m., Operation Tomorrow eyes mass spectrometer. fc30 p.m., KLOR Presents "Born That Way." 10:30 p.m., Championship Bowling Junie McMahon challenges pres ent champ Joe Wilman. SATURDAY ON KGW-TV: (8) 4:00 p.m., Bar 8 Double Feature "Sunset in Wyoming," Gene Autry. "Hands Across the Border," Roy Rogers. 6:00 p.m.. Circle 8 Hnedown Johnny Furhmann & Billy Dixon, Johnny Morgan, Irish tenor. 7:00 p.m., Saturday Film Fair "Naughty Marietta," starring Jean tie MacDonald. Nelson Eddy. Frank Morgan. 10:30 p.m., Channel 8 Playhouse "Sahara," stars the late Hum phrey Bogart, Lloyd Bridges, J. Carrol Naish. SUNDAY ON KOIN-TVi (6) 1:00 p.m., Odyssey conveys mounting tensions of man about to be ilaughtcred in "Pickett's Charge." 2:00 p.m., Armchair "Calendar Girl," Jane Frazee, Gail Patrick, Victor McLaglen, Kenny Baker. 4:30 p.m.. See It Now Study of current conditions and forces at work in most fought-over nation in history, Poland. 5:30 p.m., Telephone Time A 14-year-old girl leads French-Canadian fort against Indian war party. 6:00 p.m., Air Power Atom-bombing of Hiroshima and surrender board battleship Missouri. 6:30 p.m., Lassie It's "Boys' Day" in Calverton. 7:00 p.m., Marge Gower Champion Show Jack Benny and Dan Dailey are guests in this premiere performance. Music, comedy, and dancing. . 8:00 p.m., "Cinderella" Special - Rogers and Hammerstein's first TV original "Cinderella," headlining Julie Andrews. Co-stars Howard Lindsey, Dorothy Stickney, Edith Adams. Ilka Chase. 9:30 p.m., Alfred Hitchcock At last find out who killed the Count. 10:30 p.m.. Our Miss Brooks The joke is on Mr. Conklin tonight. 11:05 p.m., "Berlin Correspondent." Dana Andrews, Virginia Gilmore co-star, SUNDAY ON KPTV: (27) 9:45 a.m., The Pastor "United We Stand." 12:30 p.m., This Is the Life "Tin Gods" reveals the secret of boarding-house recluse. 1:00 p.m.. Afternoon Theater "Vogues" starring Joan Bennet and Warner Baxter; "The Pretender" stars Albert Dekker, Alan Carney. 4:00 p.m.. Wide Wide World Pulitzer Prize-winning poet Robert Frost reads poem dedicated to Spring; Yosemite Park showing Half Dome, Glacier Point, giant redwood trees and Yosemite Falls; Arizona for a county fair. 8:00 p.m., Steve Allen Show From Hollywood, Steve's guests Ten nessee Ernie Ford, Peggy Lee, The Collins Kids and Dinah Shore. 9:00 p.m., Aluminum Hour "The Big Build-up." Actor becomes pawn In producer's gamble. 10:00 p.m., Loretta Young Show Boy and girl find privacy threat ened by unsettling events in each other's room. 10:30 p.m., Sunday Star Time "House Across the Bay," George Raft and Joan Bennet. SUNDAY ON KLOR: (12) 3:30 p.m., The Living Book "Noah and His Family." 4:30 p.m., How Christian Science Heals "Freedom From Enslaving Habits." 5:00 p.m., American Religious Town Hall Meeting "Abolishing In tolerance in America." 6:00 p.m., Pioneer Playhouse "Lawless Cowboys." 7:00 p.m., "Hotel Berlin," with Helmut Dantine, Andrea King, Ray mond Massey, Faye Emerson and Peter Lorre. 1945 release. 8:40 p.m., "Bullets for O'Hara," with Anthony Quinn, Roger Pryor and Joan Perry. 9:30 p.m., Man Behind the Badge "The Case of the Quiet Guest," 10:00 p.m., Ray Anthony Show Songstress Connie Haines and singer Johnny Desmond guests tonight. SUNDAY ON KGW-TV: (8) 12:30 p.m., The Way "The Tourist" illustrates healing power of neighborliness. 1:30 p.m., Bible Puppets "Joseph in Egypt." 4:30 p.m.. Medical Horizons Clarence Clearview, first electronic man to suffer phychosomatic disorders, makes television debut. From Oklahoma U. medical school. 6:30 p.m., Life of Riley "The World's Greatest Grandson." 7:00 p.m., You Asked for It Art Baker takes exciting ride with rov ing radio car reporter team of the Los Angeles Mirror-News. 9:00 p.m., Omnibus Leonard Bernstein turns to music of Johann Sebastian Bach. "St. Mathews Passion," sung by the Schola Cantorum. 10:30 p.m., "The Spiral Stair case," mystery stars Dorothy Mc Guire, George Brent, Ethel Barymore. INSIDE HOLLYWOOD Erin O'Brien Reached Fame by TV Route Instead of Broadway Bv BOB THOMAS HOLLYWOOD W-Erin O'Brien is one of the latest and loveliest examples of the truth of the adage "Go east, young girl." Betty Grable and numerous oth ers found fame only by heading for New York. Then they were discovered by Hollywood. The same is true of Erin. But instead of playing on Broadway like her predecessors, she got her break in TV. Erin was born in Hollywood and grew up in Long Beach. But it wasn't until she started appearing as a regular with Steve Allen in New York that her home town be gan to take notice. Now her career is booming. She mav sign a contract with Warners which wants her for a role in "Marjorie Morningstar." She has guested here with George Gobel and other shows and is signing a deal with Coral Records. Erin is a soft-spoken, dark haired lovely who looks a bit like Jean Simmons. Erin O'Brien is really her name, and she's the eldest of 14 children of a Long Beach milk delivery man. Except for a vear's training wnen sne was 11. she's had no singing lessons. "But I come from a singing fam ily," she explained. "We were al ways singing around the house.' She also sang at civic clubs. etc., and that's how a scout for a Los Angeles TV station saw her. Her mother's reaction to the offer of a job: "She's too fat." Erin was a pudgy 145 pounds then, com pared with er present 122. The five-day grind on Al Jarvis' Matinee Show helped slim her down. After three years of it, she went on the road as a singer. Then she retired to become a "domestic engineer," 'the wife of singer Jimmy Fitzgerald and mother of two sons. That might have been the end of it except for the workings of fate. An agent friend spied her dining out ti'ith her family in a drive-in restaurant, asked her about the lead in a local musical The show laid a large egg, but it prompted her to try out for Arthur Godfrey's Talent Scouts, which was appearing here. Erin won, was hustled off to New York the same night. She came to the at tention of Steve Allen, who ad mired her patrician beauty and way with a song. I That's her saga, but the best is 'yet to come. Her career could i well take o(f. now that Hollywood has claimed ber at long last. On Television UHF-KPIV (27) VHF KOIH-TV (6) KLOR (12), KGWTV (8). KVAL (13) Program on schduls only at Unit of start. SATURDAY 4:30 p.m. KPTV Industry KOIN Sl.owtimt KLOR Movie KVAL Wizard 5:00 pjn. KPTV Movie KCIN-Tex. Hansen 5:30 p.m. KOIN Movie KLOR Gardening KVAL Disneyland 1:00 p.m. KPTV Mr. Talent KOIN Soldiers Fortuns KLOR Joe Palooka KGW Hoedown 6:30 pjn. KPTV Dateline Europe KOIN Buccaneers KLOR Tomorrow's Stars KVAL Rln Tin Tin KGW frontier 7:00 pjn. KPTV Death Valley KOIN Annapolis Men KLOR Academy Thea. KVAL cwrence Weik KGW Movie 7:30 pjn. KPTV People R Funny KOIN Sam Levenson KLOR Movie 8:00 p.m. KPTV Perry Como KOIN Jackie Gleason 8:30 p.m. KVAL Janet Dean, R.N. . 9:00 p.m. KPTV Sid Caesar KOIN Oh. Susanna' KLOR Operation Tomrw KVAL Sid Caesar KGW Lawrence Welk 8:30 p.m. KOIN Hey, Jeannlel KLOR Presents 10:00 p.m. KPTV George Gobel KOIN Gunsmoke KLOR N.O.P.D. . KVAL George Gobel KGW Ozark Jubilee 10:30 pjn. KPTV-HIt Parade KOIN Talent Scoua KLOR Bowling KVAL Hit Parade' KGW Movie 11:00 pjn. KPTV Movie KOIN Movie KVAL Movie 11:30 p.m. KLOR Famous Play SUNDAY 9:00 a.m. KPTV Church in Home 9:30 a.m. KPTV Man to Man 9:45 a.m. KPTV Pastor 10:00 a.m. KPTV Churches 10:30 a.m. KPTV Faith Frontiers KOIN Faith Today 11:00 a.m. KPTV Civil Defense KOIN Lamp 11:30 a.m. KPTV American Forum KOIN Last Word KVAL Bowling 12:00 noon KPTV Outlook KOIN Face the Nation 12:15 p.m. KGW Prayer k Hymn 12:30 p.m. KPTV The Life KOIN News KVAL Lighted Window KGW The Way 1:00 p.m. KPTV Movie KOIN Odyssey KVAL Christian Science KGW Telecourse 1:15 p.m. KVAL Movie 1:30 p.m. KGW Bible Puppets 1:45 p.m. KGW Give Thee Peace 2:00 p.m. KOIN Armchair KLOR Building America KGW World Report 2:30 p.m. KLOR Lighted Window KGW Challenge of Books 3:00 p.m. KLOR A. A. Allen KVAL Lawrence Welk KGW Dr. Spock 3:30 p.m. KPTV Zoo Parade KLOR Living Book KGW Johns Hopkins 4:00 p.m. KPTV Wide World KLOR This Is the Answr KVAL Wide World KGW Great Decisions 4:30 p.m. KOIN See It Now KLOR Christian Science KGW Medical Horizons 4:45 p.m. KLOR Transition 5:00 p.m. KLOR Town Hall KGW Dean Pike 1:30 pjn. KPTV To Announce KOIN Telephone Time KLOR Oral Roberta KGW Press Conference 5:00 p.m. KPTV Meet the Press KOIN Air Power KLOR Pioneer Playhoust KVAL Meet tne jfress KGW Whirleybirds :30 p.m. KPTV Roy Rogers KOIN Lassie KVAL Roy Rogers KGW Riley 7:00 p.m. KPTV Bengal Lancers KOIN M. Gower. Champ. KVAL Bengal Lancers KGW You Asked for It 1:30 p.m. KPTV Circus Boy KOIN What's My Llnef KVAL Playhouse KGW Amateur Hour 8:00 pjn. KPTV Steve Allen KOIN Cinderella KGW Open Hearing; 8:30 pjn. KLOR Movie KLOR Movie 9:00 p.m. KPTV Aluminum Hr. KOIN Theater KVAL 3 Lives KGW Omnibus 9:30 pjn. KOIN Hitchcock KLOR Man Behind Badg KVAL Wyatt Earp 10:00 p.m. KPTV Loretta Young KOIN $(14,000 Challenge KLOR Ray Anthony KVAL Loretta Young 10:30 p.m. KPTV Movie KOIN Miss Brooks . KVAL Movie KGW Movie 11:00 pjn. KOIN Movie KLOR Wrestle Reds Have Big Base in North, Norse Disclose OSLO. Norway (tfl A powerful Soviet military machine close to NATO s northern flank is support ed by recently built-up industrial areas which would be of tremen dous importance in event of war, authoritative Norwegian sources and Saturday. The sources made information on Russian strength in the far north, opposite Norway s frontier, available in connection with re cent Soviet threats of atomic de struction against this country if there is war. Norway was warned not to permit NATO to establish atomic installations on her sou. The informants, who wish not to be named, said the Russians have 100 air bases, 1,500 planes, 530 warships and 6 to 8 army divi sions in the Kola Peninsula and former Finnish Karelia, close to the Norwegian and Finnish bor ders. Along with the military buildup, the Russians "have industrialized the area and extended their rail roads to points virtually on the border. The industrial development seems mainly to be of economic significance, aiming at exploita tion of the vast mineral resources, forests and hydroelectric potential of the area. Phone 'Hogs' Fines Sought A bill was introduced in the House Friday to make party line telephone users give up the line when somebody else has to make an emergency call. The sponsor of the bill is Rip. Grace O. Peck 'D, Portland. It would alfect emergency fire, police and medical calls. Anybody who refused to stop talking when such a call was necessary, would be lined. Mail Heavy at Travel Department f"r ""Z These employes of the Travel Informa tion Division of the Oregon State Highway Department are nearly hidden by just one day's mall being sent all over the world to LIKE CHRISTMAS TO State Travel Unit Deluged With Information To the mailman, it must seem something like the Christmas mailing season all over again. But to at least one state agency, the thousands of letters being re ceived every week are an undis guised blessing. Thus far in 1957, more than 50.000 inquiries have been received by the Travel Information Divi sion of the Oregon State Highway Department, which actively seeks DOROTHY DIX COLUMN Brother May Be a Louse, . But Mama Still Loves Him DEAR DOROTHY DIX: We are a family of sue children, married and in our own homes. Mom and Dad live by themselves, but they aren't well people and Mom's medication costs several dollars week. Dad earns a small salary but, you can realize, they don't have an easy time financially. ' We all co-operate, except one brother. He brings his family to Mom's every week or so, staying for dinner but never offering money. How can we make this selfish brother realize that Mom can't afford to treat them Mom, she begs too much of It, get one of of life. If he will swallow Almost every family boasts usually doesn't discriminate against him, the others might as well be tolerant, too. DEAR DOROTHY DIX: I'm a stationed in northern Canada. I fell Now that I'm leaving, I know I constantly on my mind, even when I am flying. This could be dan gerous, since flying requires complete concentration. Can you help me? DEAR GEORGE: A pilot's life safety and with due regard for those who fly with you, I suggest that you take your troubles to the commanding officer, who will see that you're grounded, if necessary, until you recover. DEAR DOROTHY DIX: I am 26 I have met a wonderful girl but am afraid of getting too attached to her, as I have a morbid fear of marriage. I don't know whether it's the financial angle or the responsibility that scares me. Desperate DEAR DESPERATE: Wouldn't a dreamboat as you to be taken out of circulation by one girl? As long as matrimony frightens you, you'd better avoid It. Marital re sponsibilities are not for the weak. DEAR DOROTHY DIX: I attended an all-girl high school and never had a date. Now that I'm 18, may parents and friends say I should get married. I don't feel ready, but they're making me feel like an old maid. DEAR SALLIE: Since yoc don't husband material for you, it's not seriously of marriage. Stop thinking of yourself as an old maid. Roth the title and the condition have long since gone out of date. Enjoy life normally, and In due time your prince will come along. Send your problems to Dorothy Dix. Or write for her free leaf let D-32, "How Honest Are You?" In all cases, be sure to en close a stamped, self-addressed envelope, and send request to her, care of this newspaper. Water Supply Nearly Normal In NE Oregon LA GRANDE Wl Good soil moisture conditions in the north east Oregon area should help make up for snow lost during early season thaws, resulting in near normal water supplies in the area. This was forecast here Saturday. W. T. Frost, Oregon snow sur vey supervisor for the Soil Con servation Service and Oregon State College Agricultural Experi ment Station, said snow cover on watersheds is only about 90 per cent of normal. However, local ir rigation, agriculture and forestry representatives said soil moisture and ground water conditions on the watersheds are good to excel lent, which should help prevent water losses as snow melts. Burnt River, near Hereford, was forecast equal to about 86 per cent of the average for the 15-year pe riod 1938-52. This may leave farm ers in the Burnt River area above Unity Reservoir with a late sea son water shortage. Powder River, near Baker, should have a runoff of about 101 per cent of normal. Major lower river tributaries are forecast to flow from 84 to 94 per cent of average. In theQ Grande Ronde Valley. Catherine Creek was forecast to flow 104 per cent of average. In contrast, the Grande Rcnde River POSTMEN such a huge volume of mail. The great bulk of the letters contain coupons clipped from Tra vel Division advertisements in na tional and regional magazines and newspapers throughout the United States. The ads invite the prospec tive tourists to ask for free travel information, and by the end of this year nearly 140,000 persons will have availed themselves of the op portunity. so lavishly? When we mention It to us not to say anything to them. Kay and JaV DEAR GIRLS: If yon are as Interested to your mother's emotional and spiritual welfare as yon are in her financial well-being, yon won't make an issue over your gelflsh brother, You have dropped enough hints about his cheap ness; If you haven't spoken to him outright about your brothers to tell him the facts doesn't change and I tfoubt If he your disappointment. one crumb, but since a mother nilot In the Air Force and have been in love with a girl who lives there. won t see her again. The thought is George Is not a simple one! For your own years old, tall, dark and handsome. it be rather a shame for such Sallie know anyone now who would be only early, but foolish to think so at La Grande will probably have a runoff of only 71 per cent of normal. Area watermasters reported the reservoir situation in the area is excellent. HITCHCOCK BETTER HOLLYWOOD UWAlfred Hitch cock will leave the hospital "in a few days," his physican says. The producer-director suffered a re lapse after gallstone surgery Aiarcn li. He is 56. SHADE and Hurry Tho planting itaton for Spc i teams Colored Hydrangea Plants 1.00 Each Red Flowering 1 k k Currant Each.. I.UU Weeping Willow AP 7 Ft. Trees MtJmS These specials thru April 1st only Mexzard Seedling Cherries virus tested 40c 50 Fruit Trees $ .00 to $2.50 Shade trees in great variety $ 1 .50 $ 1 0.00 Berry plants of all kinds We offer a full selection of Rose bushel, evergreen shrubs and flowering shrubs KNIGHT PEARCY NURSERY on old Portland hiway 1 mile south of Brooks Open 7 days a week I'hnnc KM 4-4151 Z'K (ireen Stamps on all cash purchases. persons requesting tourist Information. Pictured here preparing the huge mailing are (from left) Mrs. Eugene Splllman, Mrs. Edna Olson and Mrs. Dans Stoddard. Requests Most of the letters may be an swered by the division's general vacation booklet, 24 pages in color. Others may require more printed material, such as state maps, the Oregon Outdoor Guide, fishing and hunting folders, individual pam phlets prepared by chambers of commerce and resorts. A mimeographed letter, signed by Director Carl W. Jordan and inserted in the vacation booklet, invites still further requests for in formation. The inquiries generated by the invitation oftentimes require a specific answer by personal letter. These are handled principally by Jordan and his assistant directors, Dennis Clarke and Gene Maudlin. Other employes of the division are Mrs. Irene Payne, Mrs. Edna Ol son, Mrs. Eugene Spillman, Mrs. Dave Anderson, Mrs. Dana Stod dard and photographers Gene Kin ney, Frank Colcord and Marshall Hanft. Coupons Bring Mall By and large, the division Is concerned with the coupon, the un challenged mail-producing cham pion. With the division's advertis ing campaign now at Its peak, thousands of coupons are being clipped from such magazines as Holiday. Sunset. Field and Stream Outdoor Life and Household and dispatched to the Travel Division. Last week, for instance, some 5.299 individual -pieces of mail were received by tne Travel Divi sion. Most of them contained cou pons, but many other letters found their way to the division offices in the Highway Department. They range from school children seeking information which they get to prospective tourists, per sons seeking job information or would-be residents. Those which can't be answered by the Travel Division are referred to the pro per agencies. Monday Busiest Day Monday is the division's heav iest day. On Monday of this week 2,404 inquiries were received and all but a handful received answers the same day. This could welt result In add ing to the old saw about "The mailman comet h." the new phrase, "And he goeth away even more heavily burdened." The mail load may not give the mailman the Christmas spirit, but it proves the effectiveness of the advertising campaign, and that at least remotely resembles a Christ mas present to the Travel Divi sion. cmiy gum Saturday March 30 12 Noon-KGW-World Around Ut P.M.-KPTV-Pfry Come Show Sales and Service for RCA FRUIT TREES br - roof tri will toon bt ever. Flowering Trees 2.00 up Flowering Cherry Flowering Plum Flowering Crab-Apple Hawthorne 2 Yr. Grape JLfXt Vine. OU Interior Bureau Turns Thumbs Down on Hells Canyon Big Dam WASHINGTON Un The Eisen hower administration Friday turned thumbs down on Hells Can yon Dam legislation, adding ob jections to those voiced against a similar bill two years ago. ' Assistant Secretary of the Inter ior Fred G. Aandahl spelled out the Interior Department's opposi tion to the legislation in a letter to Sen. Murray (D-Mont), chairman of the Senate Interior Committee. Three 'Hard Luck' Candidates Among 29 Winners of Oscars By ALINE MOSBY United Press Hollywood Writer HOLLYWOOD (UP)-Among the 29 happy winners of Academy Awards this week were three "hard luck" entries that at one time nobody wanted. Songwriters Jay Livingston and Ray Evans soy that snaring the coveted trophy for the best song of 1956, "Que Sera," meant even more to them than when they won for writing "Button and Bows"and Mona Lisa. 1 "When we wrote 'Que Sera' for 'The Man Who Knew too Much' hardly anybody thought it would be a hit," Evans revealedToday the fashion is for rock and roll and hillbilly tunes. l',vans said the director, Alfred Hitchcock, liked it anyway, but others at the studio and the "hard- boiled members of the music busi ness" didn't go for the tunc. Title Considered Drawback "They said it was too off-beat, too corny and it had a foreign title which is supposed to be the kiss of death," Evans commented. After a hassle, the tune was fi nally allowed into the movie. Although it was only used as a dramatic point by Doris Day and never sung straight in the film, the tune was welcomed quickly by the public, ' Even "Around the World in 80 Days," which took the Oscar for the best film, had tough sledding Fire Floats To Firemen WATERTOWN. Mass. WV-Wat- ertown fire fighters waited on a bridge yesterday for a fire to come to them. Residents of adjoining Newtown called their fir department yes terday when they spotted a row- boat loaded with flaming hay on the Charles River, The boat drifted toward Water- town and Newton fire fighters called that department. Watertown fire fighters went to a bridge spanning the river and waited for the fire to float to them. It did and they put it out. Police said youngsters created the floating bonfire. GLADIOLUS BULBS i RAINBOW RIOT OF COLORS The samo qunlity bulbs we have sold for the past five years from GLADLAND ACRES Lebanon, Oregon All Bulbs Dusted and Ready to Plant LEVER SPRAY NOZZLES WITH AUTOMATIC SHUT-OFF "w- m w jbTsWL. i i - i.i Murray had asked the depart ment's views on legislation to au thorize a 400-million-dollar federal dam in the Hells Canyon reach of the Snake River along the Idaho Oregon border. Such a project would flood the sites of three smaller dams licensed by the Fed eral Power Commission (FPC) for construction by Idaho Power Co. Aandahl said, in effect, that the department had left the decision as to whether federal or private at the start. Michael Todd's new technique of casting big stars in hit pails was laughed at around the Hollywood swimming pools, Determination Worthwhile And Anthony Quinn might never have won his Oscar for best sup porting actor if it had not been for producer John Housman and director Vincente Minelli. They were determined to make "Lust for Life," the story of artist Vin cent Van Gogh. "At MGM they called it 'Hous man's Folly," Quinn reflected re cently. "Almost everybody on the picture figured we were making something just for our own en joyment. Quinn, in the role of artist Paul Gaugin, was on the screen only 7V4 minutes. Yet he made his part so memorable he won an Academy Award. mm SEE OUR SPECIAL CENTENNIAL SALE SECTION Iff this paper todayl StCHON N, PAGES 1 TO 24 NEW 400 COUNT "SCOTTIES" Sfefl SOAP FOAMING ACTION CLEANSER New Package dams should be built In the Hells Canyon area up to the FPC in Since 1955, he wrote, the FPC gave Idaho Power a license, its action was affirmed by a U. S. Court of Appeals, and the case has been taken to the Supreme Court. Unless the lower court decision Is reversed the existing license "will be final" Aandahl- sai. He added: "This is as it should be, for the Congress has itself prescribed the route to be followed by applicants for licenses and by parties who oppose the granting of licenses. "It would be unfortunate if, be cause of disaprppmont with lhA conclusions reached by its own crcaiure the Federal Power Commission the Congress should in effect undertake to review and revcrso those conclusions rather than leaving to the commission the exercise of sound discretion that is vested in it and to the courts the determinations that have been placed within their jur isdiction." TARZAN CAUSE OF SUIT LOS ANGELES Ifl-A 10 mil lion dollar damage suit has been filed against Edgar Rice Bur roughs. Inc.. allfffin? It hrnlro an agreement signed in 1950 with commodore Productions involving exclusive Tarzan television rights, CommnHnrP Pnntpnrla Rllrrnnnlia Inc., gave Sol Lesser Productions inc., me rv rights to Tarzan, al though Commodore met the com pctitive bid. FACIAL TISSUE Choice of New Colors 'HE liaAlvtlM9 clean sep 11 A.M. TO 8 P.M. SUNDAY HOURS mi