Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, June 22, 1955, Image 20

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    SIX MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE
Wednesday, June 22, 1955
They'll Do It Every Time
t By Jimmy Hatlo
G4ReoyLE,"WEtxrr-vouRsa 80S,
PUT UP UISOWM TV4WTENhW AtO ALMOST
WRECKED THE MOUSE DOtM IT
TuEti WHEN THE R4W COMES IN THROUGH
THE HOLES HEfertADEWJO GETS THE BUME
WHY, THE ROOFIMO COWTR4CTOR.OF CUSS '
WELL-THERE'S THE"
BE
6U4R4HTEE OR
NOT?
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Around Hollywood
By ALINE MOSBY
United Pre Correspondent
1
uroolrc Hilt cVlP
is' not giving
Aline Mosby
Hollywood (U.R) Vivian
Blaine, the original doll of
"Guys and Dolls" winds .up the
movie version
ary'sl of her Broad-
4L - way hit in two
up that Brook-
lyn accent yet.
ine Drassy
"Adelaide" of
the m u s i c al
will launch a
"first" in the
theater world
when she re
assembles the original cast for
a run in' a Las Vegas hotel be
ginning in August.
Vivian, Robert Alda, Sam Le
vene and even some of the
"mugs" from the Broadway op
ening night will present a trim
med version of "Guys and Dolls"
at the Royal Nevada hotel. The
only difference from a stage run
will be the audience devouring
.steaks and the roulette tables
clicking outside.
"My husband, Manny Frank,
and I tied up the rights and cut
the show to an hour and a half,"
the blonde singer explained. "We
will duplcate the costumes and
sets of the New York run. I think
it will start a trend of musicals
playing in Las Vegas. "Pajama
Game" would be wonderful
there." t
This 12-week wind-up in Las
Vegas will bring Vivian a record
for holding onto a role. She
started wisecracking in Brook
lynese for 'Guys and Dolls" on
Broadway in 1950. After two and
a half years, she moved on to
head the London company.
Then, contrary to usual Holly
wood custom, producer Samuel
Goldwyri tapped her for the
movie version.
"I kept hearing Marilyn Mon
roe wanted the part, and also
Betty Grable, but Mr. Goldwyn
had told me in 1951 that he
wouldn't do the movie without
me," said Miss Blaine as we sat
in her dressing room on the set
at Goldwyn Studio today.
No Disappointment
The o'ther stage roles were
taken by Frank Sinatra and non
singers Marlon Brando and Jean
Simmons. Vivian thinks Marlon
and Jean "did beautifully
their fans won't be disappoint
ed when they sing."
f . .l X-. t, , f J
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be the Sonotone way.
C. R. Adamson
District Manager
839 East Jackson Blvd.
Miss Blaine tried Hollywood
years ago but stardom "just
didn't happen." Twentieth-Century
Fox studio called her to
take over Alice Faye and Betty
Grable roles when these blondes
became pregnant.
"It's a kiss of death to be call
ed a 'new Alice Faye' or 'new
Betty Grable,' " she sighed. "I
never could play my own self."
After a nightclub stretch she
won the "Guys and Dolls" part
"because the producers saw
something in me which Holly
wood didn't comedy."
Vivian now is so entrenched
as "Adelaide" that fans often
stop her on the street to "say
'person' in Brooklyn." I asked
her, too, and she trilled, "I don't
say 'poisson," I say 'pair-son. "
"You know," she said as she
wriggled into a pink satin dress
for the "Take Back your Mink"
number, "I feel like a mother
about this part. I know "Adle
laide" so well I can look at her
objectively. :
Jehovah's Witnesses
Will Attend Conclave
Seventy -five delegates from
the Medford congregation of Je
hovah's witnesses will attend an
assembly at Vancouver, B. C,
June 29 through July 3. J. W.
Mather, presiding minister here,
will head the delegation. v Ap
proximately 25,000 are expected
to represent the northwest at
the conclave.
Mather described this as one
of a series of 11 world-wide con
ventions. In 1953, Mather point
ed out, an international gather
ing of ministers at Yankee Sta
dium in New York drew a peak
attendance of . 165,829. from .97
nations. This year it is hoped
combined attendance figures will
double that.
Cities in the United States and
Canada named as convention
centers are Vancouver, B. C, Los
Angeles, Dallas, NeV York, and
Chicago. European cities se
lected are London, Paris, Rome,
Nuremburg, Stockholm, and The
Hague.
Fruit Packers Told
Of Regulations on
Women and Minors
Salem Fruit and vegetable
packers have been notified by
the state wage and hour commis
sion that changes in the minimum
standards on employment of
women and minors in their firms
will take effect August 13.
The commission has rescind
ed the 1942 order governing
women's and minors' employ
ment in such firms and brought
the firms under regulations of a
1952 order which governs a min
imum 66 cent hourly rate, the
action ups the legal minimum
of overtime pay for women in
the plants from time and a half
after 12 hours to time and a
half after 10 -hours and double
time after 12 hours daily. Wom
en working with perishable pro
ducts are permitted overtime
hours under Oregon's wage and
hour law. Minor employees of
plants will be limited to a 10
hour day maximum under the
change in orders.
Other Requirements
Other requirements which will
newly affect women and minors
working in the packing plants
include a 10-minute rest period
after three consecutive work
hours and a sliding scale of wom
en's overtime pay for hours
worked on the seventh consecu
tive clay. Weight-lifting restric
tions and work recess regulations
also are provisions of the 1952
standards not contained in the
rescinded order. The wage and
hour commission's action ex
pands the 1952 order further to
include meat processors but ex
cepts the farmer processing fresh
products on his farm.
The commission is comprised
of Mrs. Frederic W. Young and
Mrs. Mary L. Jackson, Portland,
and Henry S. Howard, Eugene,
with N. O. Nilsen, labor commis
sioner, serving as executive secretary.
CANCER DEATHS
New York About one-third
of all cancer deaths in the U.S.
could be avoided by early de
tection and proper treatment.
fowo Man Joins State
Forestry Department "j
Salem U.R) Harry Marsh- j
all, who graduated this spring
from the Iowa State College
school of forestry, joined the
Oregon State Forestry Depart
ment yesterday and was assign
ed to Astoria on timber sales.
Marshall will work under
Chester J. Reed, chief forester
for the Clatsop-state forest 140,-000-acre
sustained yield unit
which goes into effect July 1.
Marshall formerly worked for
the Iowa conservation commis
sion at Ames. '
Roy Peairs, 1952 graduate of
the University of Idaho school of
forestry, has been given the post
of technical forester at Spring
field with the Eastern Lane For
est Protective Association.
Peairs has also been associated
with several western Oregon
logging concerns and the U.S.
forest service.
Court Records
POLICE COURT
Albert Joseph King, violation of ba
sic rule. $10 bail.
Katherine Easter Lance. Gold Hill,
following too close. $5 bail.
Archie Robert West, failure to yield
right of way to pedestrian. $10 bail.
Francis Jordan Rhodes, failure . to
stop at stop light. $5 bail.
Welby Tipton Poff. failure to stop
at stop light. $5 bail.
Lenard Earl England, failure to
stop at stop sign, S3 bail.
DISTRICT COURT
Calvin Leon Reisinger, inadequate
muffler, $15.
Ronald Moore, switched license
plate. $10.
Lola M. DeRosier, inadequate muf
fler. $15.
Ronald R. Couser, failure to stop at
stop sign, $10.
Lee F. Gywnn, operating a motor
vehicle while operator's license sus
pended, $30.
Joe Garman, drunk in public place,
$1.
Stanford J. McCourry, failure to stop
at red light, $10.
James G. Slack, no motor vehicle
license. $15.
Leonard E. Steege, inadequate muf
fler. $10.
William R. Peyton, overheight, $10.
Guido Mei. no PUC permit. $15.
Owen E. Breles, failure to yield
right of way. $10.
Alfred N. Johnson, passing school
bus while receiving and discharging
children, $15.
CIRCUIT COURT
Esther Walch vs. Louise Alexander
Walch. divorce decree.
Margie A. Winkelman vs. Donald W.
Winkelman, divorce decree.
MARRIAGE LICENSE
APPLICATIONS
Thomas Alexander Donaldson, 55,
Toledo, Ohio, and Sleatha Marie Coy,
40, of 604 Berrydale ave.. Medford.
Bead line Sunday Classified is at
noon Saturday; 10 a.m. Monday for
Monday; other days 5:30 previous day.
James Roosevelt's (Agent Recommends
Lygus Insect Spray
ife Gets Surprise
Default Divorce
. Pasadena, Calif. U.R) Mrs.
Romelle Roosevelt has obtained
a surprise default divorce from
Rep. James Roosevelt, whom
she once accused of infidelities
with a dozen women.
Roosevelt was in Washington
when Mrs. Roosevelt unexpect
edly won the interlocutory de
cree Tuesday, but was repre
sented by counsel at the brief,
uncontested hearing before Su
perior Judge Kurtz Kauffman.
Not On Calendar
The surprise hearing was call
ed without the case ever having
been placed on the court's cal
endar. Judge Kauffman explain
ed attorneys for both parties had
asked for the immediate default
hearing.
In obtaining the divorce, Mrs.
Roosevelt made no reference to
her Sensational charges of a lit
tle more than a year ago that
Roosevelt had been intimate
with other women. Instead, she
won the decree on an amended
complaint which merely accused
the Democratic congressman of
menial cruelty. -
The former nurse received
sole custody of their three chil
dren, James Jr., 9; Michael An
thony, 8; and -Anna Eleanor, 7,
with Roosevelt granted the right
to visit them only at their home.
First applications of spray to
control lygus insects in alfalfa,
lotus and clover should be made
in the near future, W. B. Tucker,
county extension agent, has re
ported. ' t
He said fields checked recent
ly indicated that spraying should
be done as soon as possible, with
a second application, if needed,
in 30 to 45 days.
First applications should be
made with DDT in either dust or
spray form. Four pounds of 50
per cent DDT in the amount of
water required to cover an acre
with individual spraying ma
chines should be used for spray
ing. Twenty pounds of 10 per
cent DDT per acre is advisable
if dust is used, Tucker said.
The second application should
be with toxaphene because the
latter is less toxic to bees and
more toxic to grasshoppers which
are numerous by second spraying
time.
Subscribers
To report improper or non-delivery
of the Mail Tribune phone
2-6141 before 6:45 pjn daily and
10:30 a.m. Sunday.
If regular delivery arrives rhort
ly after vou call please notify of
fice thus eliminating special mes
senger service.
"for economy,
convenience and
safety, you can't
beat a Triumph".
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