PAGE TWO , HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON TUESDAY. AUGUST 5. 1933 . Pianist Conquers Filmland In Same Way He Did Russia By BOB THOMAS HOLLYWOOD (AP Van Ci bouro has come and conquered Hollywood, just as be did the So viet Lmon. Last week the youthful Texas pianist piayed an unprecedented tuo tuccessne periorxar.ces at the Hollywood Bcul. T-e con certs drew a to'.al of 38, (Ml cus tomers, and Van was pad Jlf.OuO far each performance. The critics were swayed too., They raed for Chimin's rendition of Tchaikovsky's concerto, wmch. he piayed in winning the Sonet contest. Bui they were un restrained in the enthusiasm for' his Ractimaainoif D Minor Con-1 certo the second night. Commented Albert Goldberg of the Los Angeles Timesi '. . . A magnificent performance of what is probably the most difficult of all concertos." Before departing for a New York concert at Lewisohn Stadi um. Van paused to reflect on his meteoric career. Does he feel the danger of becoming a flash personality? Lum Duk. 83-year-old Chinese who came to Vancouver from Hong Kong 61 years ago, has now ap plied for Canadian citizenship. "I find I like Canada." he explained. Very definitely." he replied "Taere are flash personalities in any line of endeavor, and I've cot to see that U doesn't happen i to me. "For that reason. I have tried 'to cancel everything for the next iwo months. I've got to get off itne treadmill that lt been on. ex ' citing tnough it has been, and de vote some thought to my future. "You can't keep driving all the time. As somebody said, you need isome time to twiddle your thumbs and gather your forces. I plan to devote at least seven days to noth jine but twiddling my thumbs." Though he was proud of his Bowl fee. Van said he wasn't overly interested in money. "That's not what I'm after." he said. "There are so many things more important than money. Mon ey is actually the easiest thing to achieve. You've got to plan for the future. You can't put juice back in a squeezed lemon." The pianist declared his affec tion for California on his first vis it here, but added that his future dates preclude returning for a year and a half. Next year he ex pects to spend up to three months touring the Soviet Union, includ ing Siberia, and two months on a tour that may take him to Por tugal, Yugoslavia. Poland, Bui gana and Romania. "DENNIS THE MENACE" 'Don't take rroFf l tdl' Xey yxjhaoa wiry chest! open daily 7.-00 p. m Feature At 7:50 & 10:05 HE TURNED KILLER... fJtffL for one day! if J FRED MacMURRAYfPr i JOAN MnSP ROBERT MIDDLETON-MARIE WINDSOR t - EDGAR BUCHANAN EDUARD FRANZ SKIP HOME1ER Thursday And Friday -Ends Tonite "IMITATION GENERAL" i TT WEDNESDAY MATINEE FOR KIDS! Bra KIDS -25c ADULTS -75c . . - t DOORS OPEN 1:30 OUT AT 4:15' iElL t Starts WEDNESDAY! miti i f'l l fA - MAI TtTTHlINO The story of Johnny Butler, born white -raised as Ind CI I.. onenanooe, mZlj the frontier : girl, whose : 1 an i idian and N the difference X between V ill t their worlds! n r a a or. fit jvr. mm 4 ri M , "H- k m-t TV Saesmen Face Tough Times Durng Recesson By CHARLES MERCER NEW YORK (AP) When a salesman can't sell his product. does the problem lie with the salesman or the product or with insurmountable notions in the mind of the potential buyer? salesmen ot quite a lew prod ucts have been asking themselves that question during this economic recession. Among them are the network television salesmen who still are trying to peddle almost a third of the fall season's prime evening viewing time. We suggested yesterday that television should reappraise its sales emphasis on the star theory and the audience rating theory The suggestion, calculated to make any salesman mad as com ing straight from an ivory tower is simply to offer sponsors a good show because the audience with buying power recognizes a good show and will be interested in the products it sees advertised. 'Look, said a salesman good show doesn't sell itself to a sponsor. See It Now was a ternfr cally good show. Do you think CBS would have canned it if they could have sold it? The trouble isn't with what networks offer. It's Mishap Hurts Movie Exec CANNES, France fLTI) Jack L. Warner, U.S. movie executive was seriously injured in an auto mobile-truck collision while rouie nome today trom a casino here. rolice said Warner, who was 66 Saturday, collided headon his open sports car with a coal truck. Me sullered a concussion, a dos- sible skull fracture, severe cuts and possible broken bones. Doctors at Cannes Hospital said his condition was "very serious." they said he was in a coma. Warner was driving alone. He was headed in the direction of his ilia "Aujourdhui" at Cap d'An- tibes when the accident occurred The truck driver was not in jured. The crash occurred at 6:30 a m. (p.d.t. Mondav.) Warner's elder brother. Harrv. aica in tioiiywooa last July 2; SEVEN INJURED LONDON il'PD-Seven persons were injured at Epsom Downs race track Monday when a bottle of soda pop exploded. Two of the injured a nine-vear- ld boy who suffered throat wounds and a 34 year-old woman were hospitalized. POORS CPEN 6:30 P. Ends TONITEf SOPHIA (.ORE N ANTHONY PERKINS I SIB mm 3 " I T m with what advertisers think they want. "I don't care who started the star system or the rating system. ine point is they re here 1 ney re what most sponsors want. Are you going to refuse to sell a car to a guy because he wants sidewall tires and you think ne snouisnt nave em? All right. Jet s pass the buck to the sponsors. There will be some good shows on the home screen in the new season. But some excellent, good and poten tially good programs will be miss ing not because the networks wished to kill them, but because no advertiser would sponsor them They include See It Now - Proj ect 20, Wide Wide World, Kraft Theater. Studio One, Matinee The ater, Climax!, the Patrice Munsel Show. Omnibus will be reduced to hour length and run every other week. A television network, like anr business organization, is dedicat ed to the purpose of making mon ey. From its viewpoint there is no point in reappraising its sales thinking unless that thinking is re appraised on the same grounds by the purchasers of its time and pro grams. The general pattern of sponsor thinking, as it presently emerges lor me coming season, is at log gerheads with the thinking of viewers like myself. The majority of sponsors appear to want giveaways, quizzes, filmed melodramas and big name star shows. Their thinking is based on past successes. The majority of viewers with money in their pockets. I believe, want a wide variety of good dra mas and musicals, of programs that provoke thought and evoke emotions. Only the passage of time and viewers themselves will reveal what the public expects of com mercial television. Meanwhile, the networks stand in the middle. Starlet Flies To Trujillo LOS ANGELES (API - Actress Lita Milan has made another fly ing trip to Gen. Rafael Truiilio Jr.'s yacht. This one cost Trujil lo 510.000. The Brooklyn-born starlet and four other guests flew to Acapulco last rnday in a chartered four- engine, 60-passeneer airliner. Western Air Lines, which furn shed the plane, pilot, copilot, nav eator and stewardess, said Gen Trujillo paid for the junket with a check made out to cash. Miss Milan who returned here esterday to resume work in a movie, said she'didn't know when she'd see Trujillo aiain. The gen eral is en route home, but, she said, "That boat has a slow en gine on it." Girls Will Look More Like Girls This Fall, Winter By GAY PAULEY UPI Womea'a Editor P.AR1S (LTD Men ill have something to look forward to and at come fall and winter, with girls looking more like girls. Here is how Paris says we will Shape up so far. that is. We still have the rest of the week and Dior to go. Busts Ooh-lah-lah! Waists They're back, but higher than nature puts them. No sign of the unfitted gunny-sack of last year. Hips Thank heavens, not mudh emphasis: no bow-decorated or hobbled derrieres, which some of the chemise variations of last year produced. Legs WelL all I can say is. after watching some of France's top designers chop away the ma terial, better hie to the nearest make-me-over salon if your lees aren t comparable to Betty ara ble's. (Jams are extra fair game for the girl-watchers, with skirts as high as 20 inches from the floor. Silhouette Still narrow, but easy fitting. Fabric seems to glide loosely over the body in daytime clothes, rather than hug ging it. For evening, full skirts dominate, although some design ers lute the sleek, long formal dinner dress. Coats are bulky, and many have collars more the scale of a cape. Hair-dos the Ma. you caught me necking" look: mussy and tlufty at the front and sides. Some of the models looked as if they had used an egg-beater in stead of a comb. But the hair is smooth at the back, usually tucked up neatly, French-twist fashion. These are some of the styles facing us on the basis of the first day of fall and winter fashion pre views, by members of the Cham- bre Syndicate de la Couture Par- lsienne a high-falutin term for tightly-organized group of Par is fashion designers. Scheduled today were the works of such old-timers as Pierre Bal main, Jacques Heim who is pres ident of the syndicale,' and Coco Chanel, although Miss Chanel is a non-member. But she was to show anyway late today to the more than 600 members of the press from the United States. Canada. Great Britain, France and other parts of the globe. Every designer had variations on a silhouette again beginning to show the figure: but among those showing Monday there was i def-i mile trend to the higher waistline. I Pierre Cardin. the young design-j er who worked with the late Chris tian Dior and seven years aio branched out on his own. "indi cated" ithose are the man's words) the waist with "cheating" belts, or curved seams. Actually several of the belts didn't cheat: They definitely marked a higher waistline. Castillo of the house of Lavin Casulio went draw string-happy m his attempts to recapture the em pire, or raised waist of the early 1800 s in France. But the Spanish born designer played his terms straight and referred to his "pa jama cords" drawing the fabric into fullness under the bosom, at the waistline, at the knee, or at the hemline. When the pajama cora was used at the hem, it was elastictzed so a girl could, walk. Lucy Manguin. in one of the more conservative collections of i the day, showed a combination of tha natural waistline and bustline, and with a graceful skirt length., Daytime hems were about four inches below the knee. All the designers so far have put plenty of emphasis on the top-lingly low. Cardin's weren't qul( side: Jean Pa:ou slashes some I so bold, but they didn't leave necklines of cocktail dresses dar-'much to guesswork either. FAIRGROUNDS TUES. AND WED. AUGUST 12 I 11 , , 1 PRODUCED BY Klamath Folia Marine end Night Daily 2:1S and 8:tS P.M. 10TH ANNUAL KLAMATH FALLS' SHRINE CLUB F .At F,t th-IiTlJUMCMT Ail UXlj IMCtttOtP m WtSt WCtS 3000 Gen. A dm. Seats. Adults, $1.50; Childrtn (Und.r U), 75c Reserved Seats Adults and Children, $2.00 and $2.50 Shrine Circus Office, Old Klamath Armory, Cor. Main and Spring Sts., Klomath Foils. Open Daily 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. No Phono Orders, Pleoso .to 4S Switch To Rambler If your car has a whale-sized appetite . . . It Winning America on Economy ...Now 7th in Sales in the U.S.! With sales up more than 709c over last makes. Because Rambler is smartest to year, Rambler is one of America's best- own, costs least to run, tops all low-priced selling cars, ahead of 10 other famous cars in resale value. Sea Rambler today. ECCLES RAMBLER SALES, 401 So. 6th St.. Klamath Falls An OPEN LETTER to the people of Portland, MAINE hi On Cmpltf Sww . Vartini At 7:03 r' RIOTOUS FUN! MARLQJT . GLENN BRANDO FORD (- j-a Lob MACHIKO KYO TheTeahouse of the AvfuGtMoon' EDDIE ALBERT end ' IBHOWANI JUNCTION Wedding Rite Ruling Asked LOS ANGELES AP The month before her son was born, wealthy yachtsman Paul Hurst dipped a nr.g m a class o cham pacne. placed it on her finger and told her: "I know you feel terrible about not heme married. So now you are married. So testilied Mrs. B'arJta Hurst yesterday as she asked Superior Court to ru.e il the rue. periormed in 195 in a San Francisco bar. constituted a valid marriage to Hurst. Sne also a?ked lor support and for a rulins on the paternity o: her son Paul, now 18 montns. Mrs. Hurst said that she and Hurst lived togetner as man and rle heiore he left her in Octob er. He 6rr,:es, the ceremorv oc curred, or that he is Pauls lather 1 1 law n I I filVKS SELF AHAV I NEW ORLEANS 'I'PI - An i unidentified oid:er complained to police Monday that someone had i stolen his atch while he as swimming Pome, learning he had led bo:h the natch and his trunks or. a seawall hen he went into the water, arrested him lor indecent eiposure. TT In 1845, two men flipped a coin in a tiny town in the wilderness Oregon Territory. Francis Pettygrove, from Portland, Maine, won the toss, and the community on the banks of the Willamette (pronounced wil-lam'-et) River became Portland. it Amos .Lovejoy had won, it would have been Boston, and who knows what might have happened to us then! Twenty years later, a group in Portland, Oregon, applied for the first national bank charter on the Pacific Coast. They asked for the name "First National Bank of Oregon," but for some reason the charter came back from Washington, D. C, reading "First National Bank of Portland." (In 1865, with Pony Express communication, Oregonians settled for what they got. It took years to conduct a simple discussion!) We're writing you in our sister city across the nation to let you know that we still like the name you loaned our state largest city and our bank. However, from now on, we win be known as "First National Bank of Oregon," the name we asked for 93 years ago. There are many good reasons for getting back to basic principles, and using the name "of Oregon along with "First National Bank." For example, th new name best describes the kind of bank service w are giving . . . real, genuine statewide service, with 77 banking offices in Oregon communities. This statewide service is reallv practical. Wherever a customer of ours goes in Oregon ... on vacation, business trips, or visitine cousins . . . there's a convenient branch of his bank nearby, ready to ' give the same excellent, helpful service he gets at home. Hope you in Portland, Maine, like our new name as much as we do. As we said before, the name "Oregon" fits our statewide banking service best We're sure you will understand. IT 77 Best regards, OPEN liniR TO IVIRYBODYI ELSE, If, really offiriaL If, . point cf pride -..h First .National Ban of Oregon, as it ha, been since 1865, to brine vou tht best, most convenient bank service you could find anywhere in the world.