TWO MEDFORD (OHEGON) MAIL TRIBUNE
Wedneaday, August 7, 1937
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STANDING ON CONNING TOW ER are Egyptian crewmen trained by Russia as modern
submarine, one of three giver, by Moscow to Egypt, passes in review before President
Nasser off Alexandria. Craft rated inferior to America's nuclear U-boats. (International)
Around
Hollywood
r
I 'X- A
By ALINI MOSBY
Hollywood (IB Shirley
Jones, the voluptuous singing
star of "Oklahoma" is back in
the movies
but in name
only.
The rest of
Shirley is a
shock to ny vie
fans who re
member h t r
in the musical
classic. The
apple - cheek-
Aline Mosby ed miss has
slimmed down to a sleek, more
grown-up actress with a short
chick hair-do and whistleable
figure.
"I just decided I should lose
weight," explained Shirley, who
was wearing the shortest shorts
in history today to keep cool on
her movie set.
'I looked a little too heavy in
'Carousel' and 'Oklahoma. I
thought it would give me more
scope if I were thinner."
Shirley has been busy on TV
but has not been assigned a role
by her studio, 20th Century Fox,
since her second movie, "Carou
sel." She confessed having a
Renoir-type figure is "limiting"
when it comes to roles.
Her first move was to shed 10
pounds by cutting out desserts
and starches. Next she trimmed
her long blonde curies to an
Italian hair-do, lightened her
eyebrows and added make-up.
Her wardrobe change to in
clude clinging sheath dresses.
She also got married a year
go to singer Jack Cassidy, and
she thinks "naturally, that ma
tured me." .
The first result of the new
Shirley Jones came when pro
ducer Milo Frank spotted her
singing in a TV Cole Porter spec
tacular last season and gave her
a "Playhouse 90" script to read.
T almost passed out when I
read it," the fresh-faced Shirley
said.
"I told him 'I couldn't be hap
pier to play the role of an alco
holic in 'The Big Slide.' I never
dreamed anyone would consider
that part for me. There was a
wonderful reaction from my
performance. It opened many
other doors." q
Now Shirley is back ii? films,
co-starring with Pat Boone in
"April Love." They've tacked on
a false pony tail hairpiece and
made her a farm girl but at
least she gets to wear tight blue
jeans and do a strip teajp into
a shower bath during one musi
cal number. It's her first film
job in modern dress.
"Most fans and even some
friends don't recognize me these
days when they see me on the
street," she said. "I'd love to get
the part now of a sexy other
woman or villainness."
The Family Council
Editor's noto: Tha rzmll Council consists of m judg. a psychiatrist,
thre clergymen, a newspaper editor a women's editor and two writers. Each
article Is a summary of an actual report. The Family Council does not give
advice; it merely reports on problems that have been dealt with by
responsible, agencies and counselors.
Henry D.
her boss.
Linda D.
My wife adores
He's really jealous.
Henry D. My wife and I
are in our" early 20's and have
been married less than a year.
I guess we are going through
the, usual problems of adjust
ment or something, but we cer
tainly aren't as happy as we had
hoped.
One of the main problems is
my ife's adoration of her boss.
This, may sound silly, but it has
gotten to the point where I can't
take' it.
Linda has worked for this
man since her graduation from
high school sand I believe she'd
happily lay down her life for
him. Certainly, she'd lay down
mine. Every day she comes home
with stories about the wonder-
Copper Prices Cut
Jo Pep Up Demand
New York (IP) Two big
copper companies, Phelps Cop
per Corp. and Kennecott Copper
Corp.. Tuesday cut their price
for copper i cent 'a pound to
28M cents in an effort to pep
up demand for the key indus
trial metal used in everything
from toasters to tanks.
A third large producer. Ana
conda Co., is expected to go
along.
The new price, which follows
continued declines irPthe metal's
price in world markets, is down
17i cents from the record 46
cent level prevailing Feb. 17 to
July 10, 1956.
Producers last cut prices 2?i
cents a pound June 19.
Washington (IP) The Inter
state Commerce Commission has
authorized freight rate increases
of about 7 per cent within and
between eastern and western
territories and 4 per cent for all
freight moving in southern territory.
PERSONAL & CONFIDENTIAL
To Those Suffering the AGONIZING
PAIN of ARTHRITIS -RHEUMATISM
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this or YOUR MONEY BACK I
It has PROVED, itself If yea will
ONLY believe those words, yon TOO will
join in a hrmn of thanks and praise for
AB-PAS-EX.
It's SAD to think of the other victims
ws could help if they WOULD ONLY
LISTEN. They could be HAPPY whh thoo.
sands who TRIED EVERYTHING and
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don't wait! Use AB-PAK-EX.
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322 E. MAIN
Graham Gives Plan
On Juvenile Crime
New York W Billy Gra
ham outlined plans Tuesday
night to help combat the recent
outbreak of teen-age killings and
violence in New York.
"Christ is the only answer to
this great problem facing police
and social workers," the 38-year-old
evangelist said.
Graham said he would devote
all six of his Madison Square
Garden sermons next week to
"New York's No. 1 problem,''
combating violence by t e e nJ
gangs.
"We're contacting gang leaders
and their members and many of
them are coming here next
week," Graham said.
The leaders of these gangs,
which have an estimated total
membership of about 8,000
youths, will be invited to attend
Graham's meetings next week
"just to see what it's like," Gra
ham said.
Divorce Denied; Too
Many Love Letters
Jersey City, N. J. (IP) Mrs.
Louise F. Pohabel, 29, was de
nied a divorce from her convict
husband Tuesday because of 58
love letters.
Mrs. Pohabel, of Jersey City,
sought the decree before Super
ior Court Judge Barnard W.
Vogel. Her husband, Lawrence,
33, a convicted forger, is an in
mate in the state prison at Tren
ton. Vogel noted that some of the
letters Mrs. Pohabel had sent to
her husband since he was sen
tenced in 1951 were sighed with
lipstick smears.
Mrs. Pohabel testified that
she wrote the letters because
she was afraid of what would
happen if she tried to end her
marriage.
Voegel denied the divorce "be
cause your 58 letters to him are
more eloquent than all your tes
timony against your husband."
Eisenhower Lauded
For Oil Import Cut
Dallas, Tex. (IP Representa
tives of 18 oil producing groups
lauded President Eisenhower's
call for voluntary reduction of
oil imports but cautioned Mon
day further action may be neces
sary. The state and national associa
tions, from nearly every oil pro
ducing state in the nation, met
all day in Dallas discussing the
"oil import problem."
A joint statement issued after
the meeting said the "problem of
excessive- oil imports is now
fully recognized . by both Con
gress and the executive branch
of the federal government."
BOOK PUBLISHER DIES
New York HP) Arnold H.
Munk, 69. president of the Piatt
& Munk Co., Inc., book publish
ers specializing in children's
books, died Tuesday of a heart
attack.
Munich. Germany TPi Dr.
Heinrich Wieland, 90, chemist,
won the Nobel Prize in 1927 for
his research on bile acids, died
Monday after a long illness.
ful things he has said and done.
I'm not the jealous sort, but I
feel she looks at" me with con
tempt for not being like him.
I'm fed up and I want her to
quit her job.
Linda D. Henry says he's
not the jealous sort, but I real
ly think he believes I'm in love
with my boss. This is ridiculous
because he is a man in his 60's.
I'm not the only one who feels
that way about this man. Every
one who works for him, all his
business associates, men and
women are crazy about him. He
is a. self-made man, kind, gen
erous, thoughtful and yet he can
be very firm when necessary.
When I came into this office,
I was just a silly kid. He taught
me everything I know, never
losing patience with me. Now I
hold a responsible job with
many girls working under me.
I love my work and I' love the
daily contact with such a fine
person as my boss and I wouldn't
quit for anything but a family.
Henry should learn to be more
like my boss.
e
The Council Poor Henry!
This is the worst kind of compe
tition. He is forced to try to
measure up to a man with a
lifetime of achievement behind
him and who presents only a
formal face to Linda. His com
plaint is not at all "silly." 1
Linda should recognize she is
whittling down her husband's
ego and undermining her mar
riage with' this obsession about
her boss. He may be the "fine
person" she says he is, but she
should know that her image of
him is very one-sided. She does
not know this man in his home
life, in his moods and irritabili
ties. She doesn't know his per
sonal idiosyncrasies and bad
habits, which may be carefully
concealed. She did not know
him in his youth when he had
little authority, made mistakes
and had failures. She knows
nothing about his early married
life, when he was a young man
like Henry.
There is a strong possibility
this boss would not be all Linda
believes him to be today if he
had a wife like herself. Few men
could emerge unscathed from
so unsatisfactory a marital re
lationship. Linda has set her boss up as
an ideal father figure, second
only to God in goodness and
power. She needs to grow out of
this little-girl worship of this
man if her marriage is to sur
vive. It may help her to take a
new job, but that would not
necessarily solve everything. She
could take her idealized ver
sion of this boss with her where
ever she goes. She must make
her own mental changes that
will enable her to see this man
as an ordinary human, perhaps
better in some ways than most
but certainly far from per
fect (Copyright 1957.
General Features Corp.)
On THe Side
By E. V. DURUNO v
(Distributed by King Features .
Svndicate, Inc.)
Since the showing of the film
titled "A Lust For Life," based
on the biography of Vincent Van
Gogh, the prices paid for Jhat
artist's works have enjoyed sen
sational increases. Recently the
Van Gogh painting, The Fac
tories at Clichy, sold for S87.000.
It was purchased in Berlin in
1928 for 35,000.
Horses and Women
What are the measurements
of the ideal dress model? Accord
ing to Norman Hartnell, dress
maker to Her Majesty Queen
Elizabeth of Great Britain, the
ideal model is five feet, nine
inches in height and has the fol
lowing measurements: Bust, 35;
waist, 22 and hips, 35. These are
the measurements of the top
Hartnell model, Barbara Wim-
bush who is a married woman
with two children. She has' a
son 11 and a daughter 13.
Asking
Queries from clients. Q. What
baseball club has finished last
the most times in the American
League? I say Washington. A.
Your decision has probably been
influenced by the classic jest,
"Washington, First in War, First
in Peace, and last in the Ameri
can League always." However,
such is not the case. The Phila
delphia Athletics finished last
the most times in that league .
Q. Has there ever been an earth
quake in New York City? A. Not
a serious one. However, around
1924 there was a slight rumble
in New York and vicinity. I "was
living at Forest-Hills Gardens,
in the Borough of Queens, at the
time and the earthquake though
a trivial affair shook my bed
quite a little.
Remarkable Remark
Jayne Mansfield, in discussing
Mickey Hargitay, former "Mr.
Universe" and her good friend,
said, "I've got the man with the
most wonderful body in the
world. Mickey has a 52-mch
chest and I measure 41. It makes
dancing difficult."
Among The Married
How are you getting along
with your mother-in-law? How
is your wife getting along with
her mother-in-law? They say
one of the onajor causes of bat
ties between mothers-in-law and
daughters-in-law is a difference
of opinion as to how a child
should be reared. Speaking of
child rearing, how would your
wife have liked to have left her
first baby completely in charge
of its grandmother for the first
year. That's what a British so
cialite plans to do. "Newly born
babies are so much trouble,"
says she. "And besides, . the
baby's crying would annoy my
husband who needs his sleep.
Historical Note
A hundred years ago any
foreigner attempting to land in
Japan was immediately be
headed." So I note it said. That
is not quiie right. Commodore
Matthew Perry landed in Japan
on July 14, 1853, and on March
31, 1854, negotiated a treaty
with the Japanese government
opening up trade with the
United States. However, it is
quite true that before the Perry
treaty any foreigner landing in
Japan had a good chance of
being separated from his head.
Rugged People
As I recently mentioned, the
great a n d durable ringman
"Terrible Terry" McGovern was
born in Johnstown, Pa. They
really rear rugged people in
that historic city.- The Hon. Hi
ram G. Andrews of Johnstown,
now 83 years old, is said to be
the liveliest and most generally
active member of the Pennsyl
vania State Legislature. Who is
the oldest member of your state
legislature? I would be willing
to give you five to one in stogies
you don't know. I would give
you three to one you don't even
know who represents your dis
trict in the legislature. And the
same odds you don't '.know who
your Congressman' is.'
I
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They kail never flown before. But early one morning Z3nk
Jv) ichilner, 19, end Karel Kucera, 20, bed up Czech guild and
wobbled to the safety of West Germany in a stolen plse.
Wcis-her could fly.
bui" fhey soloed io. freedom
Thest two escaped -but 70 million others re
main captive behind the Iron Curtain. And thest
are the people at whom Radio Free Europe beams
its daily broadcasts. Escape is not its aim. Radio
Free Europe penetrates the Iron Curtain to spread
truth ... to strengthen hope and resistance.
Said the youths above, "It (Radio Free Europe
added courage and strength to strained nerves."
"It offered us ... a hope for a better future ,"
said a young nurse who fled to the V est.
"Everybody is listening even the Communists "
said an escaped Czech skating champion.
From 29 powerful transmitters, Radio Free
Europe broadcasts up to 20 hours of truth a day
to five key satellite countries Poland, Czecho
slovakia, Romania, Hungary and Bulgaria. And
how the Communist bosses fear iti
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FREEDOM
slaf FesssosM
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE