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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (June 24, 1958)
7 PAGE TWO HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OKECON TUESDAY. .TI NE 24. 1953 Actor Enjoyed Working In London With Comic Play By BOB THOMAS HOLLYWOOD AP-Barry Nel ion thought he detected some lympatheiic glances from his co workers when he returned for a TV show recently. "I could just (eel them think ing. 'Poor Barry, he hasn't been working lately,' " he laughed. As a matter o fact, Barry Nel son has been working steadily for 18 months and enjoying one of the biggest successes of his life. He drew raves for his performance as Will Stockdale in the London company of "No Time for Ser geants." Although he was signed for only six months, he extended his stay twice because the show was such a hit. "But try and tell that to people in Hollywood!" he sighed. "They think because they haven't seen you on TV or in pictures that you've been out of work." Barry is now back to repair his fences. He's up for some film roles and will take them only if they seem important. "I'm doing too well In TV and cn the stage," he explained. "If you allow yourself to get into a B-picture rut. you endanger your career in other mediums. "For that reason. I've done nly one picture in seven years. OOOB3 CPEN 6:30 P. NOW PLAYING That was 'The First Traveling Saleslady' with Jjinger Rogers. It sounded like a good project ' the time. But it turned out to be the picture that opened and closed RKO. How are you to know?" Still, he's not afraid to take chances, as he did with "No Time for Sergeants." He was playing a different kind of a role for him and in a strange country. What's more, the show seemed doomed at the start. We were sticking our necks out with an American play, star and director. Barry commented. 'To top It off, the London papers were full of a blast that Helen Hayes had leveled at the British theater. They were highly indignant." Further, he faced the raucous gallery first-nighters who have been known to hiss a play so bad ly that it cou'dn't continue. Barry said they often holler "Author!" so they can throw vegetables at him. Despite these hazards, the play was a smash. Barry decided to stay with it even though he knew his Hollywood career might suf for. 'I couldn't miss the opportunity of living over there and doing a show, he sain. It is getting in creasingly difficult for American actors to play London. 1 was thr only American in the cast." I ALAN LADD tV OLIVIA j(feHAVIIlAND IFtOXJI3 REBEL OWSlON WARDROBE WONDER Printed Pattern Fwturt 7:09-9:40 STARTS WED! Debbie Reynolds Curt Jurqens John Saxon THIS HAPPY FEELING Girl Doesn't Recall Killing HOLLYWOOD (UPI) Actress Lana Turner's tall, 14-yiar-old daughter, Cheryl, doesn't remem ber stabbing Johnny Stompanalo or giving police a statement about it, attorney William Pollack said ioday. The lawyer, who represents Stompanato's 10 - year old son. John III, Hammond, lnd., in a $750,000 damage action, question ed Cheryl about the April 4 slay ing of her mother's lover Monday at a deposition hearing in his office. After the session which left Cheryl in tears. Pollack said he had spotted "certain discrepan cies in Cheryl s story, told be fore her mother and their attor ney. Jerry Giesler. "Cheryl said she did not re member the stabbing," Pollack said. "She also does not remem her giving any statement to Chief Anderson." (Clinton II. Anderson. chief of the Beverly Hills police.) Cheryl aid she remembers going into the room with the knife and moving toward Stompanalo. hut does not remember the knife going in or coming out of his body." AiW r....uioioiiim".iiioi i UnaTUlERX"7. i.lr.HAWniPR..W IT UUI UlUUlfUUll II J0 InCHiUtO MNMINC ' ANDR MMtm HSKT PAIKS 1 OPCN DAILY 7:00 P. M 'J I i Li i SEEKS DIVORCE LOS ANGELES (AP) Diane Varsi wants a divorce again The actress filed suit against TV producer James Dickson. 26. sev eral months ago. They reconciled and the suit was dropped. Yester day the 20-year-old blonde filed another sun. 1 & y , fe eV" j a 1 1 L L, ) 9097 ;IL f 1 SIZES I I '0-20 Hospital Case Suit Dropped PORTLAND (API Dist. Atty. Leo Smith of Multnomah County Portland! said Morningside Hos pital will not be prosecuted on congressional charges of mistreat ment of Alaskan mental patients. Smith said he had made an p t e n s i v e investigation of the charges contained in a majority report by a subcommittee of the House Committee on Government Operations. The majority report listed a number of cases of what the congressmen said were mis treatment or improper treatment of the patients. The Republican minority report accused Democrats on the com mittee of political partisanship and prejudice in the conduct ol public hearings on the ho.spital. Smith said that any accusation of mistreatment could not be prosecuted because the statute of limitations has run out. His office investigated only cases in which patients had died and found no basis for prosecution, he said. The hospital has a contract with the government for caring for mental patients from Alaska. Wayne Coe, who operates the hospital, has repeatedly denied that there has been any mistreat' ment of patients. More Anti-Canada Riots Seem Unlikely In Moscow MOSCOW AP) The Soviet government stationed two addi tional militiamen in front of the Canadian Embassy today but it! appeared unlikely so (far that a demonstration was in the ofling in retaliation for the attack on the Soviet Embassy in Ottawa. .Nor was there any indication that the U.S. Embassy would be the target of a Soviet crowd, as the West German Embassy was yesterday and the Danish Embas sy was Friday. Demonstrators have attacked Soviet embassies in Copenhagen, Bonn. Ottawa and New York with stones and ink in protest against the execution of lmre Nagy and three other leaders of the 1936 Hungarian revolution. Only the Copenhagen and Bonn incidents have been reported by the Soviet press and radio, how Weather Table By United Press International Temperatures and rainfall for 24 Sundress for summer jumper with companion blouse the rest of the year. Any way you wear this versatile style, it's figure- flattering. Make several versions of this Printed Pattern in cotton, linen, rayon. Printed Pattern !KM7: Misses Sizes 10, 12. 14, 16, 18, 20. Sizej 16 ducss yards 39-inch. Printed directions on each pat tern part. Easier, accurate. Send thirty-five cents Icoinsl lor this pattern add 5 cents for each pattern for lst-class mail ing. Send fo Marian Martin, care nf Herald and News, Pattern Dept., Ml West lath St., New York 11, N. Y. Print plainly mame, ad dress with zone, size and style number. DOORS CPCN 6:3C P. M. NOW SHOWING! Gods UTILE The Story They Said Could Never Be Filmed!! Now The Screen Is Big Enough... adult Enough To Tell It! iwima Feotur At 8:10 It 10:35 Thursday end Friday B ITTilfl inufl 1 1 f I I Faahir 7:25 - 9:45 Solons Seek Tax Repeal WASHINGTON, AP Two major farm groups are working hard among members of Congress to get the House lo go along with the Senate on legislation to repeal the 3 per cent tax on freight shipments. They are the National Council of Farmer Cooperatives and the American r arm Bureau r edera- lion. The Senate voted late last week to drop the transportation tax in a bill to extend olher excise levies, but reports indicated that there w;rs strong opposition to the repeal in the House, which did not vote on the transportation levy. Lhe issue was tossed to a House- Senate conference committee. The farm groups contend that farmers and farm products pay heavy assessments under the freight tax. They say that by the time some agricultural raw mater ials reach the consunvr. the tax had heen added eight or ten times that is, they have been pyramided. That's because of the manv different movements before they reach the consumer. The effect of this piling on of this tax. the farm groups say. is to reduce the producer's return. They said the tax also adds to farm costs, which already are at record hmh levels. The tax is added to the price of machinery, equipment and supplies bought by the farmer. Tar Crushed PORTLAND (AP) Two Nor wegian seamen, hitching a ride atop a big express truck, had no clearance room when the truck went under a pedestrian overpass here late Monday night. One was crushed to death and the other was swept onto the highway and injured. The man killed was Tore Biorn Olsen. 17, of Kongshamn Tromay. Norwav. His companion. , Egil llogstli, 25, of Kragero, Norway, was reported in fairly good condi tion Tuesday but with apparent loss of memory of the accident. Hospital attendants said that aside from the memory loss, possibly stemming from a head injury, he was alert. The men were seamen on the freighter Lancelot. Why they were on the truck was not known, but the coroner's office said another seaman from the ship reported seeing them climb aboard when the truck stopped on Front Ave. for a traffic light. They were knocked from it at the Failing school overpass a few blocks south. Driver of the truck was William Byers of Grants Pass. hours ending at 4 a.m. High Low Rain Albuquerque 99 68 .02 Atlanta 81 64 Bakersfield 93 66 Boise 97 59 .31 Boston 70 56 Brownsville 92 76 Chicago 67 59 .02 Denver 84 59 .04 Detroit 71 53 .13 El Centro 110 82 Fort Worth 89 72 Fresno 90 59 Helena 84 58 .05 Kansas City 80 62 Los Angeles 87 65 Miami 89 77 Minneapolis 76 52 .08 New Orleans 88 72 New York 71 61 Oakland 74 M Oklahoma City 83 66 Phoenix 108 81 Pittsburgh 63 51 .10 Red Bluff , 87 62 Reno 80 51 Sacramento 85 50 Salt Lake City 94 69 San Diego 77 65 San Francisco 72 61 Seattle 77 59 T. Spokane 94 59 .17 Stockton 58 Thermal 111 79 Tucson 103 77 Washington 70 58 Wednesday! II I riii I I II I I 1 11 III 1 1 BillJIJ in nan rnwi (W fill. KM IV I Ull 11IIFIJ RANDOLPH SCOTT II Tall Man Riding" AND 6 Color Cartoons DOORS OPEN 1:30 SHOW STARTS AT 2:00 OUT AT 4:15 t, Kidi 25c Adults 75c Actress Wins Court Order SANTA MONICA. Calif. (AP' Aiiress Faith Domergiie has ob tained a separate maintenance de cree Irom the husband she says !"gets reMless bcitK in one place ttx long Mi.vs Dotiiergne. 32. testified in Superior Court yesterday that she wanted to make a hiune in South ern California, but that film di rector Hugo Fregonese, 50. "anls to slay in Europe and be a tree flccnt." The court ordered Freeonese to piy J'XM monthly support tor Miss liomergue and their children. In ma. 9. and John. 6. By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 24 hours to 4:30 a.m. Tuesday Baker 91 58 .01 Eugene 64 56 .20 Lakeview 65 46 .31 Medford 80 59 .05 Newport 57 56 .06 North Bend 64 57 1.27 Pendleton 94 64 .11 Portland Airp't .. 70 58 .13 Redmond 76 52 .39 Roseburg 65 57 1.16 Salem 67 57 T "DENNIS THE MENACE" ever. It was unlikely tnat any spontaneous demonstration against the Canadian and Ameri can establishments would be or dered without first setting the stage by publicizing the cause for retaliation. The extra guards brought the total outside the Canadian Em bassy t o four.' Their presence aroused some suspicion, since similar extra guards had arrived at the Danish and West German buildings a few hours in advance of the demonstrators. The Canadians said they had not asked for the extra protection. The West German Embassy had but the four guards there had little effect on the crowd of 1.500 which hurled sticks, stones and ink at the building for two hours Police reinforcements finally dis persed the demonstrators after they broke all windows in the building. West German Ambassador Hans K r o 1 1 said he delivered the "strongest possible protest to Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister A. V. Zakharov. He asked an apology, damages and a guaran tee that the attack would not be repeated. The West German government had expressed its regrets prompt ly at the attack on the soviet bm bassy in Bonn and promised to repair the damage. The continuing wave of recrim inations in the wake of the Hun garian executions brought a strong protest from the Yugoslav government to Hungary and a charge by Pravda that the United States and Britain were whipping up an "hysterical hullabaloo" to renew the cold war and sabotage a summit conlerence. Nagy, installed as premier by the Hungarian rebels, had taken refuge in the Yugoslav Embassy in Vienna after Soviet troops moved in to crush the revolt. The Russians arrested him when he left the embassy on a safe-con duct given by his successor, Pre mier Janos Kadar. The Yugoslav note to the Hun garian Communist regime termed the executions a gross and un provoked attack on President Tito's government. The note called untrue and fabricated from beginning to end" the Hungarian charge that Yugo slavia in effect had collaborated with Nagy in plotting to overthrow Kadar s government. Pravda said protests to the ex ecutions have been made in the West "to complicate the inter national situation, rekindle the cold war, sabotage talks at the highest level and pass over to open military adventures as soon as this appears possible to them." 1 he Soviet Communist partv newspaper's editorial said the West had adopted this policy as salvation from its economic cri sis. I FOOLED YA, DIDN'T I ? VOO SAID I WAS GONNA BREAK MfJCK' . Beauty Caught In Dragnet Web HOLLYWOOD U'P1 Actor- producer Jack Wehb of TV's "Dragnet" weds actress Jackie Loughery, Miss U.S.A. of 1953, to night in his third venture into matrimony. Wehb, poker-faced cop on the cops-and-robbers television drama announced his marriage plans Monday but ignored newsmen's requests lo "just get the facts. man. e refused lo say where he and his red-haired hridc would be wed but did say the ceremony would be performed by a juriee. Webb formerlv was wed to ac tress Dorothy Towne and singer -Julie London. Crooner Guv Mit chell was .Miss Loughery's first husband. California Weather Ry I'nitcd Press International San Francisco Bay Area: Fair through Wednesday except morn ing high fog; high today San Francisco 69, Oakiand 73, San Mateo 75. San Rafael 76; low to night 55-60; normal summer west erly winds. . Northern California: Fair through Wednesday except a few thundershowers in extreme north ern mountains today; night and morning high fog near coast: lit tie change in temperature; coast al winds northwesterly 10-20 m.p.h. Mt. Shasta-Siskiyou area: Few thundershowers today becoming fair tonight and Wednesday; little change in temperature. Sacramento Valley: Fair through Wednesday; little change in temperature; high both days 77-87; low tonight 52-62; variable winds 8-16 m.p.h. Northwestern California: Most ly fair through Wednesday but chance of a few thundershowers northern mountains today; night and morning high fog on coast: slightly warmer inland Wednes day: high today and low tonight I kiah 75-57, Santa Rosa 79-53. Napa 79-53: northwest winds 10-20 m.p.h. near coast. The first Swedish settlement in America was made in 1936 on the lower Delaware Rier where the city of Wilmington is now situated. Freud Disciple Dies In Salem SALEM (AP) Dr. Benjamin F. Williams, 83, a pioneer in the field of psychiatry, died in a Salem hospital Monday after a long illness. He was on the Oregon State Hospital staff for nine years end ing in 1947. Dr. Williams was a career-long fellow of the American Psvchia- trie Assn., and studied in Europe under hreud and Adler. He served 10 years as superin tendent of a state hospital in Lin coln. Neb. Educators Start Talks i BOWLING GREEN, Ohio (AP) Do prospective teachers spend! too much time learning How to teach, and not enough learning! about What they're going to teach? The question of what to teach the teacher has become one ol the thorniest problems in Ameri can education. It's going to get a long, hard look-see from some 1,000 educators and education offi cials who gathered here today for the opening of a five-day conven- lon on teacher education and pro- bational standards. A report issued earlier this week by the Rockefeller Brothers Fund put the problem this way: "In some states, the requirements for (teacher! certification arc so technical and trivial as to make it unlikely that individuals with a first class liberal education would even apply or be eligible if they did apply." The nine sponsoring, agencies hope some sort of agreement on teacher training and certification can be reached and put into ef fect nationwide. The problem isn't strictly an American one. The Russians have been struggling with it too. Dr. John B. Whitelaw of the U.S. Office of Education, who re cently returned from a four-week tour of the Soviet Union, said the Soviets are trying to standardize teacher education and at the same time bring it up to a college or university degree level. "If teachers were given the same status in this country as Ihey are in Russia, we would have no teacher shortage," he said. An orthoepist is one versed In the "art of correct pronunciation. SEEKS PRISON DETROIT (AP) Joseph W. Bobo. 22, was sentenced to 15 months to 4 years in prison at his own request. Bobo. who pleaded guilty to a shoplifting charge, asked to go to prison in order "to pull myself together and get some religion. Prison might do me some good. WmVi Only Mly .nmth Osanw ELECTROLUX 'T ARK EL 'tWEEt' Ph. 4-7167 2SS0 WTiit. St. The Ross Ice Shelf, on which stands Little America in Antarc tica, moves north at the rate of about four feet a day. The Ross Ice Shelf is about the size of Cali fornia. DANCE! SHOW! ARMORY WED. JUNE 25 In Person The Nation's Most Versatile Entertainer i. J fit, JOHNNY CASH and the TENNESSEE TWO plus WALLY LEWIS DOT RECORDS "White Bobby Son" "Kathleen" "5 v V? ' DON DEAL ERA RECORDS "Diane" "Blind Dote" and SUNNY BURGESS and "THE PACERS" SUN RECORDS Dancing 9 until 1 $2.00 Per Person (tax incl.) ddahA BEAUTY SALON TOWN & COUNTRY Call TU 2-S671 or drop In. Eva- ninai by appointment Al ways tha bttt. (LEANEST DAY MEXICO CITY (AP" Today's (he cleanest day of the year in Mexico St. John the Baptist Day. Dunkini: is a ritual In some of lhe latter cities p.c swimming pools slay open around the clock lor capacity crowds. Filiations of villages move cn masse lo near Does your car drink gas like a whale? RAM BILE R 1st In Sales Success! Mai8Meffi&r; , - , ,lt t f-7v"VS RamWer sales are up 72 over last year! Rambler gives the most miles per gallon. Rambler also costs less to buy, rle.-ci- ates less ; ; ; and out-drives, out-turns and out-parks other American cars. American Motnri Mmnt .Vonr or Amtnean GET A BANBWAG0N DEAL AND SAVE TODAY AT YOUR RAMBLER DEALER ECCLD8 BAtrJEEB8AkD. 401 So. 6th Si , Klomoth Foil, w b a I $ f, h FIVE GREAT S . 1fAAAVtftt Urn "' A llcirE.'i) FIVE GREAT Decanter Whiskies "WEDDED" INTO (M&en Golden Wedding holder. I l :r H H i n n I r n rtuM"n ii HAS HAP NO PEERS FOR FIFTY YEARS Your grandfather never tasted better whiskey than this. The best of five great decanter whiskies Mended with the best of neutral grain spirits $O60 A makcColden HWJnysogood. Pint ' Fifth cd N. ssic c.u n. turn ..L.,. WE PLEDGE t (1) All whiskies used In Golden Wtddmg art Rare Decanter Reserve Stock, (2) Every droo of the Straight Whuhey contained in each bottle (30) is 4 years eld or mere. (3) The Neutral Sp-nn (70) ire "wedded" he rem under our special cut ton process. (4) These whishiee are from our treasure house of a fed whiskies, assuring uniformity of Qual ity and highest standard. by streams to dip, piciJ and she it 001 nS)xo ji IP'. ITI'ftX-(S) l'f1 , CI. MUTtii V it'll TVt-, in tmm MP. tv tvt nm ML l HCM OUT. CO., AUOOUI. H. j o'i nrcwotks. idti'. row