They'll. Do It Every Time
UL Pm omm
By Jimmy Hado
Tr Up 415 TUBU TELL IT. SPACE
OH THE FLIGHT YOU W4MT IS WHT
tWERE IS NOTHING OF-
Ten
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VACANT SEATS FOR EVERY PASSEUGEKJ
PUKE 1 50TT4 frfS J'JST KSSBLE TWRE f SLJ5 ALJt
:
Perry Como To Star in Halt-Hour Show
Opposite Jackie Gleason on Saturdays
New York (U.R) Perry
Como, an affable gentleman who
is as relaxed as a noodle suffer
ing fatigue, moves into the fran
tic never-never land of big-time
TV competition this Saturday,
NBC-TVg hoping to bite into
Jackie Gleason's CBS audience,
has picked the casual crooner
to man the big guns in its Sat
urday night attack.
Hitherto restricted to a 15
minute CBS-TV show and an oc
casional guest shot, Comb will
emcee and star in an hour-long
program that promises to pro
vide a slew of surprises.
What Como, with the help
of his chief scriptwriter Good
man Ace, does envision is a pro
gram that will combine a leis
surely attitude and a comfort
able tfsace with a few novelties.
Guests To Drop In
One of the innovations will be
something called "walk-ons."
Name guests will drop in to do
short bits with Como without
benefit of advance billing. This
Saturday, for example, Sid
Caesar, Nanette Fabray, Carl
Reier and Julius La Rosa are
scheduled to make appearances.
Also scheduled for the first
show are a flock of billed artists
Rosemary Clooney, Frankie
Laine and Marion Lome, the
"Mrs. Gurney" of the "Mr. Peep
ers" show.
"We ..thjujk .we're going to dp
something different with guests
on this show try to weave them
into the skits or routines so they
just don't stand around. One
thing we won't have are guests
who come on and just plug a
picture. What's so interesting
about knowing what picture
they're, in?"
Figures To Sing
Como, who sells about 4,000,
000 platters annually, figures
he'll sing about three or four
numbers on the show as well as
taking a turn in an occasional
comedy skit.
"It'll be the sort of thing, say,
where Como comes in to fix
TV set," said the former barber
from Canonsburg, Pa. "We'll try
to get our laughs out of the sit
uation. We'll steer clear of gag
lines and 'this - looks-like-the-
place it-must-be-the-place' kind
of frantic comedy."
As We Live
Storing Up Possessions
Makes For More Work
There are some people who
cannot . bear to give or throw
away anything that has any pos
sible future value. As a result,
they fill their homes with things
that they may never use again.
A young woman questions the
wisdom of this:
(Q) "We live in a small home
with very little storage space ex
cept in the cellar. My mother al
ways opposed
t h ro w i n g
away any
thing that
might be used
in the future
and I have fol
lowed her
teachings. As
a result, our
basement was
filled with
things, pictures,
only . on special
occasions, books, toys, decora
tions, for different holidays, old
clothes, packing boxes of old
magazines, etc. We had so much
that I had lo pile boxes on top
of boxes, and put the most val
uable things in the top boxes.
Our basement was filled with
water nearly two feet deep dur
ing the recent floods. The boxes
that weren't in the water top-
D. Heilock
boxes of old
silver we use
Tree Ripened ;
Improved Elbe rta and J. H. Hale
Bring Your Own Containers
PERRYDALE ORCHARD
2 Miles West of Medford on Jacksonville Highway
By ELIZABETH HURLOCK, PH.D.
I pled down and everything was
I ruined. My husband, who has
always opposed my saving
things, told me it served me
right for being a 'squirrel' and
said he hoped I had learned
lesson. Do you think ' people
should discard everything they
are not using? I often find that
I can use things I have put away
and I am very glad to have them
instead of having to go out and
buy new things." Mrs. J. D.
(A) I think everyone should
save things that have some use
if there is any indication that
they may be needed at some
future date. It seems extravagant
to throw or give away some
thing that migh be used later
and then have to go out and buy
a duplicate of it.
On the other hand, I think in
discriminate saving is bad. It
clutters up a home, no matter
how large it may be, and it
makes a lot of extra work for
the person who takes care of the
home." Furthermore, when "
family moves, it makes extra
work and adds to the expense of
moving.
It is rarely safe to store things
of any value in a basement be
cause of the . dampness that
comes - in during the summer
months. It would be far better
to put them in boxes in the
corners of closets or get stor
age boxes to roll under beds.
If you limit yourself to a smaller
storage space,- you will be forced
to evaluate everything you store
and decide whether it is worth
the space it will take up.
(COPYRIGHT 1955.
GENERAL FEATURES CORP.)
FERRY SINKS, 50 DIE
1 Conakry. French West Africa
(U.R) Authorities reported to
day that a ferry sank near Non-
goa on Sunday, drowning 50 of
55 passengers.
How can you afford to buy
70 of your groceries
m o n - A
You do 70 of your grocery buying "sight
unseen". The products are in packages.
Only the label outside guides you.
How can you afford to buy without
looking inside each package? What makes
j you so sure you're getting what you pay
for? In fact, what makes you sure about
anything you buy?
Isn't it simply that you've learned the
basic rule of safe and sound buying:
I A good brand
is your best guarantee
No matter what you want to buy, you
know you can count on a good brand.
When you pick one, you know you're right.
The more good brands you know, the
surer you are. Get to know them in this
newspaper. They can help you cut buy
ing mistakes, get more for your shop
ping money. J ,
BRAND NAMES FOUNDATION ,
" Incorporated
A Non-Profit Educational Foundation
37 West 57th St, New York 19, N.Y. .
O 32?EaiKE'
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE
Around Hollywood
By ALINE MOSBY
United Press Correspondent
Hollywood (U.PJ In Holly
wood's only monster factory sits
a green rubber suit that has be-
&mt come a too
"star" and one
of the biggest
box office
draws in t h e
country.
This "star"
has the stom
ach of a turtle
and a throat of
a frog, and is
Aline Mosby f r e q u e n tly
seen carrying beautiful damsels
into the deep while popcorn
munchers in theaters cringe.
The rubber suit, with swim
mer Ricou Browning inside, is
Universal - International's "Gill
man" in the "creature" series
that threatens to go on forever.
The Gill man's first two horror
movies reaped nearly $5,000,000.
Naturally a third, "The Creature
Walks Among Us," is now before
the camera.
Birth of a Gill Man
As new stars should be inter
viewed, I visited the workroom
where the Gill man was born.
This monster factory is the
only one in Hollywood, because
Universal pioneered horror mov
ies from "Phantom of the Opera"
and "The Hunchback of Notre
Dame" through the Franken
stein era.
Crammed on shelves like hor
rible ghosts are some of the fac
torv's creations the head of
Frankenstein's monster . . . the
ant-like men from the recent
"This Island Earth" ... The
bulging head of the "Glob Man"
from "It Came From Outer
Space." t
On tables are chemist's flasks
filled with powders that make
the special foam, rubber of which
the monsters are made. A huge
oven for baking the creatures
Pair Charged in
Abortion Death
Of Girl Silent
Philadelphia (U.R) A couple
chareed with . the abortion of
heiress Doris Jean Ostreicher
refused today to reveal the mys
terious events that occurred in
their apartment the night the
22-year-old bride died.
Bartender Milton Schwartz
and his beautician wife, Rosalie,
were arrested Monday night.
Their attorney, Israel Finkel-
stein posted bail of $5,000 each.
The couple will be arraigned
Thursday.
Finkelstein said he would au
thorize "absolutely no state
ment" by the couple.
Mother Out on Bail
The arrests came only a few
hours after the victim's mother,
Mrs. Gertrude Silver, 49, wife
of a food chain store executive,
was released in $1,500 bail when
her ' hearing on- an accessory
charge was continued. She was
to be sent to a mental institu
tion.
Three other charges were con
tained in the warrant against the
couple in addition to the actual
abortion. They were accused of
being accessories before the fact
of ah abortion resulting-' in
death, of conspiring with Mrs.
Silver- in the abortion attempt
and of perjury at the Sept. 2 in
quest into the girl's death. The
inquest resulted in a finding of
homicide.
Eloped With Policeman
The Schwartzes and Mrs. Sil
ver were present in the apart
ment, Aug. 24, the night of the
death of Mrs. Ostreicher, who
had eloped two months to the
day earlier with Miami Beach,
Fla., motorcycle patrolman Earl
Ostreicher, son of a Chicago
businessman. v
Mrs. Silver Monday was de
clared unfit to be arraigned by
two "impartial" psychiatrists.
Magistrate Elias Myers per
mitted bail on the promise of
Mrs. Slivers personal psychia
trist to have her admitted to a
mental hospital for treatment
until, she is able to appear for a
hearing.
LEGION OFFICIAL DIES
Portland (U.R) Mrs. Mae E.
Whitcomb, secretary of the
American Legion auxiliary in
Oregon for the past 17 years,
died in a convalescent home here
yesterday. She had been ill for
several months.
NEW ROAD OPENED
Pendleton (U.R) A new 15-
mile stretch of U. S. Highway
:0 between Pendleton and La
Grande has been opened to traf
fic. The new road eliminates a
series of hairpin curves on the
route.
3 "KsifS
I fORf
Medically
FORMULATED
Conlaim medically proved tngredi.
fits, chads craving for tobacco. Dis
solve lounge in mouth wlmn desire for
tobacco occurs. Safe, non-habit form
ing, pleasant tasting.
Central Rexall Drug
Main and Central
stands in a corner. With portions
brewing on bunsen burners, the
monster factory could be a mad
scientist's laboratory for a U-I
horror movie.
Never Use Fur
The two geniuses who
dreamed up many of these mon
sters are Buddy Westmore, of
the make-up clan, and Jack
Kevan. One of their rules: never
use fur because it reminds peo
ple of their pets.
"The studio wanted a half
man, half-fish, for the 'creature'
series," Westmore explained.
"We studied up on ocean life and
made his palm like an octopus'
underside, his mouth like a fish,
his feet like a crab's.
"We molded his first clay
head on that old plaster head of
Tuesday, September 13. 1955
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE-THRE:
if
Ann Sheridan. For our monsters
we try to think of what horrifies
people, such as the absence of a
nose."
The Gill man may even push
Davy Crockett ,out of vogue.
Thousands of children have writ
ten the studio wanting to buy
"Gill man" suits. But any mass
production would be too expen
sive. "We thought the Gill man
would frighten people, but they
feel sorry for him, apparently be
cause he's a misfit," said Kevan.
PEACHES
Tree Ripened Improved
tldertas, Keosoa, & Hales
DICK PAYNE
COKER BUTTE ROAD
And the Rebirth
After each "Gill man" movie
the monster has been slaught
ered,, only to rise miraculously
from the deep in the next sequel.
"In this current picture he
changes into- a human, but at
the end he dies," said Kevan. "If
the picture is successful, he can
be cast on a desert island, bave
a mate, a Gill woman. The first
female monster.
"Then we can go on to 'Son
of Gill Man'."
WANTED
Men For Packing House Labor
BETWEEN 18 and 48 YEARS OF AGE
Call at Our Employment Office
BEAR CREEK ORCHARDS
Pacific Hiway 99 South
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MEDFORD
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