Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, August 15, 1958, Page 2, Image 2

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    4
PAGE TWO
HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
FRIDAY. AUGUST 15.195a
After Many Year's Absence
Ellery Queen Back On TV-
By CHARLES MEilCER
NEW YORK (AP)-That ur
bane detective Ellery Queen is re
turning to television alter an ab
sence of several years.
His reincarnation is being su
pervised by Albert McCreery, the
producer of Matinee Theater, re
cently deceased. The Further Ad
ventures of Ellery Queen will be
gin Sept. 26 as an hour weekly
series over NBC-TV Friday evenings.
The series, which docs not yet
have a sponsor, will he produced
live from Hollywood at a cost re-
Continuoui Sat. and
Sun. from 12:45
DOORS CPEN 6:30 P. M.
NOW SHOWING!
on Gunman's
VAN TAB
H HEFLIN HUNTER
A GUNMAN'S
WALK;
CinimaScOPC
'DENNIS THE MENACE"
porledly the equivalent of the av
erage half-hour filmed show.
McCreery, who has come East
in search of an actor to play
Queen, was saying the other day
liuit he believes it will he "a so
phisticated show because Ellery
Queen is deductive."
Queen, as you probably know,
is a personable. New York law
yer who also writes detective sto
ries. From a literary standpoint
he's a direct descendant of Sher
lock Holmes. He's the antithesis
of .Mike Hammer who, from a lit
erary standpoint, has no ances
tors anyone cares to mention.
"In an Ellery Queen story," I
says McCreery, you learn the
iacts of a crime and then you de
duct who did it. This calls for a
stream of consciousness technique
which, in turn, must be offset. by
action.
"We plan to shoot special film
outside the studio chases and the
like and then integrate it with
the live drama.
The selection of an Ellery
Queen is one of McCreery's chief
problems. Thus far he says he
hasn't picked his man.
The selection of the neht per
sonality for Queen is very impor
tant," McCreery says. "We have
to match the mental image of nu
merous readers of Ellery Queen
stories who have definite ideas of
how he looks and acts. Once we're
over that hurdle of identification
we're on the way."
GENTLE APPROACH
HAGERSTOWN. Md. (AP) -
City police are using the gentle
approach on motorists parked
overtime at meters.
Chief Blair Overton has ordered
his men to scout around for the
driver and warn him rather than
write out a ticket at once. He
points out the purpose of the po
lice is to serve the public, not to
make money.
OPEN DAILY 7:00 P. M.
ENDS TDNIGHT!
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Faotura at 7:40 I 10.45
Shown At 9:20 eoly
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MtTROCOLOR i
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Taylor London
john Cassavetes
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Roman holiday for Doan . . . and a musical delight for you! JT?!?!
Xett Thousahd bedrooms
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'AitBOOYCOUVO FLUSH HIS SOCKS DOrVM THE TDH.ET?
NOBODY'S P&fzCT'' THAT'S wwr I shouloa fiioj'
Marilyn Monroe, Not Only
On Time, But Always Early
By BOB THOMAS
HOLLYWOOD (AP) "I want
the world to know," said director
Billy Wilder, "that Marilyn is not
only on time, she is three hours
early."
Fantastic, but true. It was late
morning when Marilyn Monroe
sashayed onto the set of "Some
Like It Hot." It was her first day
of shooting after a lengthy ab
sence from Hollywood, and she
wasn t due lor work until the
afternoon.
She was decked out with spit
curls, cloche hat and fur-trimmed
Ik J. I I M.IM, . j Ji.i.usauui
ai:iumiy.iiiiBiin.T:iniHSii.ti:i'Mi.ii
Continuous Sat. and Sun, From 12:45
feds SATURDAY!
Walt Disney-
WALI DISNEY S
1 INDERELLA WVI'l
In
TltkMciMd
rurs
MOST
IWIKUU
mt'
SiaAiA SUNDAY
KE WAS NAKED YElAOWl j
!L W -R Jt
Star Better
After Shock
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) Actress
Wanda Hendrix. stricken during a
conversation with her estranged
husband and hospitalized in "deep
shock," was reported in "satis
factory" condition today at Cedars
of Lebanon Hospital.
But her physician, Dr. Lee Sie
gel, planned to keep the petite
film star in the hospital until next
week. She was kept under con
stant observation by a private
nurse.
Miss Hendrix screamed and col
lapsed: Wednesday during a con
ference telephone call with her
millionaire husband, James Lang-
ford Stack Jr., who was in Reno,
Nev.
Atty Oscar R. Cummins, repre
senting the actress, said she had
offered Stack a chance to save
their marriage but that the
wealthy sportsman had told her
they were talking about legal of-
lairs. not emotional matters.
Dr. Siegel was called when Miss
Hendrix failed to respond to con
versation, Cummins said. The
physician ordered her hospital
ized and described er condition
as "deep shock."
Stack s attorney objected lo the
doctor's diagnosis and said the
case appeared to be one of "his
trionics not hysteria."
Cummins said that his client
was a "very sick girl."
, "Her face is twisted grotesque
ly and she shows no interest in
conversation," the attorney said.
"If this is histrionics, she's the
greatest actress in the world."
chemise, and only she could save
the sack from its imminent death.
She looked great.
After the niceties, Marilyn
stopped to talk with an old friend.
The scene was the train shed at
MGM and it brought' back memo
ries. "This is where I did 'Asphalt
Jungle,' " she reflected. "So may
be it is lucky to be in the picture
here, though I don't believe in
luck."
What does she believe in?
"A combination of circum
stances," she explained. "Like
how I got the' role in .'Asnhalt
jungle, jonn Huston was consid
ering another actress for the role,
but a friend got me in to see him.
It happened that I had met him
briefly before, and he remem
bered it. After we had talked a
while he gave me the role."
QUa 1r..,J II II i
glanaT.orn'ey LoX'Ser 'lfL ?L!" 10 Kin
Shp hori nnl . u.i . iJiusseinS Kovernmem.
wnicn she slithered over a couch,
but it made a big impression
Scientists Consider Selves
Lucky If Moon Date Kept
By JOHN A. BARBOUR
Associated Press Science Writer
NEW YORK (AP)-Science has
made a date with that mysteri
ous lady, the moon. But will it be
able to keep it?
As early as next Sunday, scien
tific marksmen hope to set off the
first moonbound rocket. But they
will consider themselves lucky in
deed if they bring off a rendez
vous.
Here are some of the problems
they must solve:
The moon is at least 220.000
miles out in space. But scientists
must aim at any empty point,
137,000 miles ahead of the moon's
course, and hope that both moon
and rocket arrive at about the
same time. That would be about
2'i days after firing.
Granted perfect aim and you
can imagine what a small error
could do in 200,000-plus miles
the three-stage rocket still must
fire perfectly. This means boost
ing its speed to about 25,000 miles
an hour needed to escape the
earth's gravity.
Given this initial speed, the
rocket will gradually slow under
gravity s pull until nearing the
moon, it will be traveling only
about 3.000 miles an hour. In fact,
its .. average for the trip may
be only about 5,000 miles an hour.
The speed is important. If the
rocket slows too quickly, it will
fall short of its objective. If it
doesn't slow enough, it can zoom
past and on into space.
While there are many ways for
the moon rocket to fail or merely
flirt with success, there is only one
way to completely succeed.
What the scientists say they
would really like to do is send up
a rocket that would orbit around
the moon a few times and then
plunge back toward earth, and
probable destruction.
The rocket, in its few turns
around the moon, would take a
series of closeup pictures in
eluding never-before-seen shots of
the moon s hidden side and re
lay those back to earth.
It would also measure the mag
netic field of the moon, measure
temperatures and count meteors.
How many of its scientific tasks
it completed would in a sense
measure the rocket's success.
To give their rocket the best
chance of finding the neighbor-'
hood of the moon and staying
there a while, the scientists have
carefully picked the course and
meeting place.
They hope to save a few thou
sand miles by waiting until the
moon comes closest to earth.
The Air Force shot, if success
ful, will catch the moon in a good
photographic pose. It will be mov
ing from a new moon to a first
quarter phase.
This means that the sun will be
lighting up part of the backside
of the moon away from earth
Jordan Police
Clamp Curfew
AMMAN. Jordan (AP) Police
clamped a curfew on the Palestine
refugee camps around Amman
today and then raided these tin'
last name, William Powell, and
from Ben Lyon, who costarred
with her in "Hell's Angels" (and
who also gave Marilyn her screen
name).
'Jean Harlow had a reallv rira.
matic life," Marilyn said. "She
had some pretty touch times and
was around Hollywood (or a long
nine Deiore sne was recognized.
I mentioned that it sounded like
another blonde I knew.
'Could be." she smiled, and she
sashayed olf.
mum let her escape and 20th
tentury-Fox hired her. History resulted.
I asked if she would now hp
working more regularly,
I hope so, she said. "I could
not lor a while because I was
tied un in lecal difficnllips NW
liney are all cleared up.
What about "The Can Can
"I've read about it but Fox aas
not said anything to me about that
picture.
"The Jean Harlow story?"
"I would want to be sure it
was done right." she said. "It's
a big responsibility to portray
someone else's life: if inmnn
aio. mine, l a want lo be sure it
was nandied in good taste."
sne said sne had learned a lot
Police sources said about AO or
65 persons were arrested. Other
sources said blasting powder and
ammunition were found.
The clampdown opened the Mos
lem sabbath, a day of possible
trouble because it brings emotion
al, easily inflamed crowds into the
streets. Another 500 to 800 security
troops were added last night to
tne already heavy military guard
in Amman.
Rumors rocketed through the
Jordanian capital. One said that
antiroyalist riots might occur to
day. Another said an attempted
coup was frustrated yesterday
mere was no confirmation here
of an Israeli radio report that
about a dozen top Jordanian offi
cers were arrested yesterday on
charges ot plotting a coup. A num
her ot ollicers were arrested last
about Harlow from the actress' imonth for ploUing against Hus-
Science Mulls
Radiation
BURLINGTON. Vt. (API-Is all
radiation harmful? Does man suf
fer every time he absorbs a little
more o( the radiation that exists
in I he world aronnd him?
Or can a little bit of radiation
prove helpful to man?
Some of the world's top scien
tists have been debating that ques
tion at the University of Vermont
for the past week, but it remains
unanswered.
About 750 leading scientists
from all over the world, including
both sides of the Iron Curtain,
have been attending the weeklong
first International Congress of
Radiation Research.
All Ihe scientists agree that
radiation In high-level, one-shot'
doses is dangerous. It will kill
man or cause mutations that will.
damage future generations. i
But the scientists are divided on
the eflects of low-level radiation
exposure spread out over lorfg per
iods oi time.
, Dr. Howard .1. Curtis of the
Brookhaven National Laboratory
takes the position that anv dose
of radiation shortens man's life in
direct proportion lo the size ot the
dose.
'AH radiation shortens man's
life." says Dr. Curtis. "This in
cludes the natural background of
radiation present all the time."
Dr. Curtis, outgoing president of
Ihe Radiation Research Societv,
said experiments indicate man's
life is shortened by 12 days for
each Roentgen of radiation re
ceived as an acute dose over his
entire body.
But another American sicentist j
said there have been some indi
cations that exposure to small
amounts of radiation may not be
harmful and may even lengthen
man's life.
Dr. George W. Casarett of
Rochester IN Y.) University said
this may be because ol the human
body's dynamic response lo.dam
sc. ,
New Supplies
Sent To Tunis
WASHINGTON (AP)-The ITnit.
ed States is shipping a new sup
ply of military equipment to Tu
nisia to strengthen that North
African country's police force.
The shipment, part of which has
arrived in Tunisia, includes small
arms, jeeps, trucks and radio sup
plies. A similar shipment was
sent earlier this year.
American officials said the
equipment was being turned over
to Tunisia at the request of Pres
ident Habib Bourguiba. They said
there was no connection between
the shipments and the unrest in
the Middle East.
Elvis Bids
Mom Goodbye
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) Elvis
Presley bids farewell to his best
girl at a Memphis funeral home
today. Mrs. Vernon Presley, the
young singer's mother, died early
yesterday at the age of 42.
Elvis, granted an emergency
furlough from the Army, had
spent the day before chatting with
his parents in her hospital room,
but was asleep at his suburban
mansion when she died.
Gladys Presley was hospitalized
Saturday with a liver ailment,
acute hepatitis, but doctors said
an unexpected heart attack caused
her death. Her husband was at
her bedside.
"It broke my heart, Elvis said
as he went to the hospital. "She
was always my best girl."
Elvis flew here Tuesday from
Ft. Hood, Tex., where he is sta
tioned. He is an only child.
Heroine Hits
Film Studio
HONG KONG (AP)-The real
life heroine of Ingrid Bergman's
latest film today denounced 20th
Century-Fox Film Corp. as "a
bunch of liars."
"I don't know what filthy words
they might have put in Ingrid
Bergman's mouth things which I
would never have said," said
Gladys Aylward. a diminutive,
over-60 missionary whose life in
China is the subject of the 20th
Ceqtury-Fox movie "The Inn of
the Sixth Happiness."
Miss Bergman plays Miss Ayl
ward in the movie, which has not
been released yet.
A spokesman for the film com
pany denied yesterday that the
film had been made without con
sulting Miss Aylward. He main
tained she was very enthusiastic
about the picture and felt it would
help her missionary work.
But Miss Aylward, who recently
arrived in Hong Kong from For
mosa, said Mark Kobson, tne
producer of the film, had not sent
her a script as he promised.
"I believe they are doing some
thing in the film which they know
I won't like, so they have not sent
me the script. I know nothing
about the film," she declared.
'These people Fox. have
been hounding me. for months and
Ihey won't tell me anything. I
have suffered under the Commu
nists and Japanese, but I have
never suffered so much pain as
over this picture."
DANCER TO WED
HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Dancer-
actress Ann Miller and Texas oil
man Bill Moss will be married
next week at La Jolla, Calif.
Hollywood Producer
Has Restful Night
CANNES, France (AP) Dot
tors said Jack Warner's temper
ature returned to normal today
after the film producer's firS
really restful night since he. was
injured in an automobile accidcat
Aug. 4.
The doctors continued to reservj
judgment on his condition, -ho
ever, and kept the "no visitors,"
sign up. Warner, 68, suffered it
vere neaa ana cnest injuries.
ALL'S WELL .
npvmv Tpv m vm, u
L. . . . . . , 1
Smith has an old-fashioned well at
his home, out h pumps nothing but
hot water. Neither Smith or citj
water officials can explain the phe.
nomenon. Wells in the same ares
give cool water.
Fred Lawrence ;
is a good man:
to know
He can probably sava .
you quite a bit of money. " -
As an Allstate Agent, ,
he's a specialist at taking '
the red tape and high '
' cost out of insurance.
Why don't you call .
him?
Stars, Roebuck and Co. Bldg.
133 So. 8th Ph. TU 2-4411
D
r
maun
1,. MOl
Vou'rt In good hands wtth
Allstate
Cempinitt'
OtMCfi SKOKH, III.
Stockton Man's
Body Recovered
JACKSON, Wyo. (UPI) -Park
rangers have recovered the body
of a 43-year-old Stockton, Calif.,
man who fell to his death on a
mountain ledge in Grand Teton
National Park Wednesday.
He was Parshall A. Terry, who
slipped and fell 100 feet to a low
er ledge while jumping rocks.
A 12-man recovery team, led
by park ranger John Fonda, found
the body early Thursday about
1.000 feet from the peak of the
11,750-foot mountain.
Terry, according to chief pack
ranger Kussell Dickenson, was
with his two teen-age sons and a
brother-in-law, Francis Andres of
Ruppert, Idaho.
sein.
Except for the presence of spike
helmeted police and troops, down
town Amman started the day
quietly with appearances normal.
In addition to the British-trained
troops of the Jordanian army,
formerly the Arab Legion, there
are more than 3,000 British sol
diers in Jordan to offer Hussein;!
whatever protection possible
against foreign interference and
domestic enemies.
Of the 250,000 people in Amman,
about 75.000 live in refugee camps
scattered on the outskirts. Police
began raiding the camps just as
dawn was breaking.
J he refugees have been in
camps since the new state of Is
rael drove them out 10 years ago.
Most of the half-million refugees
in Jordan live on U.N. relief. They
have tended to follow the brand
of violently anti-Israeli Arab na
tionalism preached by President
Nasser of the United Arab Repub
lic, who has issued veiled calls
for Hussein's assassination.
HARDTOP
RACING
Saturday Niqhr, Aug. 16
Time Trl.tl B:30 Rarti 7:;I0
KLAMATH SPEIDWAY
Adm.: Adults 90c-Shidnti 50c
SMJ4
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GLAZING COMPOUND
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glase in wood or metal sash.
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$1.20
4 lb. can
A&B PAINT
STORE
1229 E. Main Ph. 4-3324
Your favorite store has plenty of
fresh Nalley Potato Chips available
in spite of the fire which destroyed
our plant in Springfield.
While our new Springfield plant
is being rebuilt, we are making daily
shipments from our plants in Ta
coma and Spokane.
When you buy Nalley's, you buy
the best!
NALLEY'S INC.
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J5.V Us1"1 your own personality . . .
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ti! fashions. Dr. Noles Optometrists
offer you a fabulous collection
for summer from the style
centers of the world.
bive Green Stamps
Pleasant, Courteous Credit Alwaft
COLUMBIA OPTICAL CO.
730 Main St. TU 4-7121
Optn Friday Nit 'til 9 and all day Saturday
Dr. Omar J. Nolai and Dan R. Hayler, Sr.
o
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ACE TV TIPS
One of the extras that Zenith engineers in
cluded in Zenith TV sets is an easily remov
able safety glass so that Zenith set owners
can perform the simple chore of cleaning the
picture tube face and inside surface of the
safety glass when necessary. This is just one
of the many "quality engineered" features
Zenith engineers have taken into considera
tion so that owners of Zenith products can
have the maximum in performance at the
minimum cost. ACE-TV at 1140 Riverside
Dr., will be pleosed to show you personally
the many features that make your invest
ment in sight or sound entertainment an
outstanding buy, when you buy Zenith!
Each Zenith product sold by ACE-TV is "un
conditionally guaranteed for 90 days" and
of course in the case of TV sets, the one
year warranty, on -picture tubes apply also!
I his guarantee is at no extra cost, ACE-TV
feels that Zenith "quality" merits such a
guarantee and will stand behind it with their
full servicing facilities!
"Expert service at reasonable prices," is our
??hTWe SJ?'-ce fining that uses tubes.
LllyeS,estrfUree! 'hr-
nrvfL5?"' ca" ACE"TV TU 4-3581
vnr . . hQt seryice cnor(5e" by bringing
R.rfi,0nUr ,modern servic etnter "',0
o dfs a b?f" 'USt ne b,0ck South of Hor-
REMEMBER
Save That Face At
ACE TV
1140 Riverside Drive Ph. TU 4-3581
Haursi ta 7 Man. thru Sat.
Authariitd Salaf and Sanrlca