Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, August 27, 1958, Page 2, Image 2

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    HERALD AD NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 27, 1953
PAGE 2 A
Fashion Writer Previews
Fall Styles For M'Lady
By NADEANE WALKER
PARIS (API Jump on the fash
ion merry-go-round; here we go
again.
The waistline is up. the neckline
is down. Skirts are cut off at the
knee, except for Dior's, which are
down to mid-calf.
AM Ik,. .... .on coo In- unnr
self today, with permission of the
fashion creators, who Insist on
giving buyers and manufacturers
a three-week head start on copy-
Red Bombings
Interpreted
LOS ANGELES (AP) - "The
Russians do not want war," says
Mme. Chiang Kai-shek.
Newsmen asked her last night
about the Chinese Reds' inten
tions. "The Communist mind is so
devious." said the wife of the
Nationalist Chinese leader, "that
we can never be sure just what
their plans are."
She said renewal of the Red
Chinese attacks on Quemoy may
only be a probing operation but
that the possibility of an all-out
invasion cannot be ruled out.
Mme. Chiang, who arrived from
New York by plane for an ad
dress before the American Bar
Assn. convention, said a firm
stand by the free world would off
set Red gains.
"That was proven in the Berlin
airlift and in the Mideast," she
said. "The Russians do not want
war."
NOT SO HONEST
NEW YORK (AP) - Leopold
Goetz, 67-year-old Greenwich Vil
lage newsstand employe, won't be
able to enjoy the $75 reward he
got for returning a woman s lost
wallet which contained personal
papers out no money.
He's charged with raising the
175 reward check to $175 and
cashing it.
Doort Open 6:30
mmm
ENDS TONIGHT !
. On Complete Show
Show Starts 7:35
Feature at 8:30 Only
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PfjK. TARZAN'S Greatest Challenge!
illMvtl H'Vn' i1 V against superstition and cunning 'vv"T "tJa
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Happens ln COLOR! i
fSSify )J PDGWE" IFOR UPB
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ci Wlli lfT Pvf BRUCE HUMBERSTONE IrTMk I
VSrtfsl AJV$ A SOL LESSER PRODUCTION fSr
" TODAY! fMjnia
ists and the curious public.
Fashion wnterf were allowed to
describe the new styles alter open
ings three weeks ago, but pictures
could not be published until today.
Do these new fashion photos
make you feel outmoded? It's all
la matter of the waistline, which
'tiaS migrated Hlt UD UndcT the
bust, to imitate the styles Em
press Josephine wore in the days
of Napoleon's empire.
But before you go overboard
(or the Empire line, be fore
warned: it has all the earmarks
of a short-lived fad. The dress
makersAmerican, Italian, Eng
lish and French have all gone in
for it a bit too heavily and unani
mously. There's no surer way to
run a new fashion quickly into the
ground, and buyers were already
grumbling before the last show
ended.
Here are other news notes of
the season, in case your memory
needs refreshing:
Black is the leading color.
Bright shades come in mostly for
after-dark occasions. Gold lame,
red. rosy pink, mauves, blues and
green lead the spectrum.
Loosely woven mohair wool,
satiny surfaced or tweedy wool
ens for daytime give way to sump
tuous all-over embroideries, satins
and laces lor evening. Fur trim
mings abound sable If you can
afford it, or mink will do.
Big collars are practically
trademark. They provide top
width for Cardin's "Mushroom"
line, and are almost capes in
some Dior -versions.
Rounded or scoop necklines are
just about as low as they can go.
But some bare-bosomed evening
fashions (notably Dior's) modest
ly cover up the arms with long
sleeves. Backs are often bare to
the waist.
Dark stockings (black at Lanvin
Castillo, creole brown at Desses)
are the darling of the moment.
Lanvin even brings back slocking
clocks for a naughty look, and
achieves a shocking contrast with
black stockings and pastel shoes,
Most popular hats to go with the
new drosses are tall feizes or puff-
crowned mushrooms. Some look
like cabbage heads or feathery
fright wigs.
SUFFERS SECOND FRACTURE
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (UPI)
Tenn.
Gcrlrude Ferron, 72, who came
south from Philadelphia to recu
perate from a broken hip, was in
hospital here today with a bro
ken elbow suffered when she
slipped on steps in Great Smoky
Mountains National Park.
POORS CPCN 6:3Q P.
LAST 2 DAYS!
HUN l-k EKNEST
lADD DORGNINE
&
RaBLBMBERS
FRIDAY!
t, WILLI AM, SOPHIM
- - .
HOLDEIT10REN
I TREVOR HOWARD)
"TKe Ken"
a:
"DENNIS THE
'LOCKV WE CAMB.OAOi LOOK
Presidential Campaigns
May Be Seen On Video Tape
By CHARLES MERCER
- NEW YORK (AP) Video tape
the system that enables moving
pictures to be recorded and in
stantly played back without the
use of film, is improving televi
sion news coverage.
Looking ahead to the 1960 pres
idential conventions one can see
Lawyers-Star
Hold Tax Talk
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Desi
Arnaz discussed income and taxes
with the American Bar Assn. yes
terday, but he Indicated they
come in the proper sequence.
'Let me make the dollar first
Ihe television actor-producer said
in a panel discussion with three
lawyers. I can t pay taxes before
that."
Arnaz was discussing hypolheti
il cases involving formation, op
eration and eventual closing out
of an independent movie and tele
vision production firm. He said
the Intent of the tax law is un
questionable, but
"It's the interpretation. The gov
ernment wants people to make
films but sometimes it appears to
he collecting taxes before the
money is made."
Reports Anger .
Actors Guild
HOLLYWOOD, Calif. (AP)-The
Screen Actors Guild is up in arms
over reports that GIs are being
used as actors in a commercial
television series being shot in
Germany.
SAG President Leon Ames
wrote Rep. Joe Holt (R-Califi
that "under no circumstances
should Army personnel be allowed
to perform without remuneration
in commercially sponsored filmed
IV programs.
Ames said the series is called
"Citizen Soldier" and uses Army
personnel as actors without giving
them beyond their military salary.
MENACE"
STEAK KNIVES'.
that tape might help solve some
of the problems involved in TV
coverage of the 1952 and 1956 con
ventions. Even the most ardeni
members of both major parties
agreed that keeping TV cameras
on both conventions continuously
in '56 resulted in some mighty dull
viewing.
Sig Mickclson. general manager
of CBS news, said: "I'd prefer to
edit the conventions and use video
tape for the less vital parts of the
proceedings in 1960. We would, of
course, go live for balloting and
other highlights. You never can
overlook the importance, the sense
of actuality, in live coverage of
events as they happen."
NBC News first used video tape
in presenting President Eisenhow
er's inaugural address in 1957.
More recently CBS News used
lape in covering the United Na
tions sessions at the height of the
Middle East crisis last month.
One example was the day Pres
ident Eisenhower addressed the
Oneral Assembly. The Presi
dent's speech was carried live
and also taped; the speech by An
drei Gromyko. the Soviet repre
sentative, was taped only. At 7:30
p.m. that evening CBS-TV pre
sented a special half-hour pro
gram of the highlights of both
speeches with interpretive inter
polations by network commenta
tors. Although tape has the advan
tage of a belter image than
film and does not require its
lenglhy processing, tape still can
not be spliced. Thus breaks made
in the continuity of a taped pro
gram must be bridged by live
camera shots. It is expected that
it will be technically possible to
splice tape within two years.
Although it s much too early to
determine exactly how television
will cover the 1960 conventions,
Mickclson pointed out the net
works established a pattern of sat
uration coverage in 1952 that it
may be difficult to break. In that
year, because of the number of
single station markets and single
cable lines which had to be shared
the networks compromised by all
covering the entire proceedings.
Video tape, as CBS News used
it in recent U. N. coverage, would
appear to he the means of elim
inating much tediousness in TV's
coverage of the 1H60 conventions.
Red Invasion
Fear Ebbs In
WASHINGTON (AP) Worry!
that the Chinese Reds might soon
try a full-scale invasion of Que
moy ebbed here today. Instead,
officials speculated on what the
Communists intend by their con
tinued heavy bombardment of the
off-shore island.
Rep. Clement Zablocki (D-Wis)
and Sen. Mike Mansfield ID
Mont) joined U. S. diplomats in
viewing the Communist attacks as
a primarily political, rather tnan
military, move in the cold war.
They discounted the possibility
of an imminent seizure attempt
against Quemoy or Matsu, Nationalist-held
islands just off the
Communist - controlled mainland,
or against Generalissimo Chiang
Kai-shek s Formosa stronghold it
self.
That left open the question:
Just what are the Reds up to?
Some State Department author
ities figured the Chinese Commu
nists might invade the tiny, light
ly defended Tan Islands near
Quemoy as a cheap followup to
the big bombardment of the past
five days. Peiping could then
ballyhoo this as a great victory.
These officials suggested Red
Chinese Premier Mao Tze-tung
might be trying to strengthen his
bid for United Nations member
ship, due for discussion at the
u. n. General Assembly next
month. They said he may also be
serving notice he wants to be in
cluded in any future summit con
ference.
Mansfield, the assistant Sen
ate Democratic leader and a For
eign Relations Committee mem-
Former Actress Scheduled
To Appear In Court Today
LOS ANGELES (UPI)-Attrac
live Gregg Sherwood, wife of au
tomobile executive Horace E.
Dodge II, appears in court today
for arraignment on charges ot
suspicion of battery and drunken
ness. The former actress and Chicago
columnist Irv Kupcinet, 46, were
jailed Tuesday after an early
morning encounter with police of
ficers along La Cienega Boulevard
near Hollywood.
There were two stories.
The one told by Officers Ken
neth F. Bernard and Lawrence B.
Brown pictured 34-year-old Mrs.
Dodge as a pugnacious, fighting,
kicking, spitting objector to going
to jail.
The other told by the former
model was that she was the vic
tim of a "nightmare" of hair pull
ing, arm twisting, and tugging by
police matrons.
According to arresting officers,
the trouble started when Mrs.
Dodge leaned from a car driven
by Kupcinet and yelled at offi
cers: "You guys had better get off
the street. You're speeding and
you're drunk."
After following and stopping
Kupcinct's car. the police said
Mrs. Dodge called them "two
slimy Napoleonic idiots."
"You both are slobs. I hate
you!" the officers quoted Mrs.
Dodge.
The scene switched to the city
jail where the officers said the
tall homily, using a fashionable
Many Cheer
Late Ferry
PORT AUX BASQUE, Nfld.
(UPI I Thousands turned out
along the waterfront Tuesday to
cheer a ferry. Ship whistles
sounded and car horns blared.
The Canadian National Rail
ways' ferry, William Carson, fi
nally had arrived more than
three years late.
The n-million-dollar ferry had
been scheduled to run between
North Sydney and Port Aux
Basques. But, after it was built,
officials realized the ferry was too
big tor Ihe dock here.
So the ferry was put on another
run and the federal government
started a three-year program to
improve Ihe harbor. And, at last.
Ihe William Carson docked here
on a test run.
Soroptimists
Set Fall Meet
Highlights of the national con
vention ot Soroptimist clubs, held
at Houston, Texas, from July 6
lo 12. will he given hv Edna Al-
hrecht. president ot the Soroptimist
Hub of Klamath rails at the first
fall meeting to be held Thursday
noon.
Luncheon meetings this year will
he held at the Winema Hotel in
the Camas Room, the same loca
tion as last year.
"The boring details of the con
vention will all be mimeographed
and the lalk will be devoted to
Ihe interesting highlights." accord
ing lo Kalhleen Thompson, pro
gram chairman for this year.
Also on the program will be vo
cal numbers by Sue Thompson.
This will be the first meeting
conducted by the new shite of of
ficers and a large attendance is
expected. Members wishing to i
bring cucsts are asked to call the
chairman of the attendance com
mittee, Melvene Nitschelm at TU
4 5t78 (Klamath View Auto Camp)
or ld.i Lamb. TU 4-5t32 (Coca
Cola Bottling Company.
MANY INJl'RF.D
BELEM. Brazil U'Pl'-A truck
filled with farm workers over
turned near here today, killinf
4 persons and injuring M others.
ainy teriouiijr.
Of Quemoy
Washington
i :j L. - j..ut-J ,L i
bardment was designed to bring
pressure to Dear lor a U. N. seat.
He called it a diversionary lac
tic by Peiping, after Mao's recent
meeting with Soviet boss Nikita
Khrushchev, to keep the United
States on the defnsive no wthat
Stats on the defensive now that
Middle East tension has eased.
Zablocki, chairman of a House
Foreign Affairs subcommittee on
the far East, said he has been
told that "the reports of the
ferocity of the attacks on the is
land were a little bit exaggerat
ed." Zablocki said U. S. leadership
in the Far East would suffer, a
heavy blow if Quemoy should be
evacuated now. Any such pullout
should not be undertaken at least
until after the firing has quieted
down, he said.
Intelligence officials reported
new evidence the Reds have bol
stered jet fighter and bomber
strength along the Chinese coast.
But they said Communist troops
are still several hundred miles in
land and no invasion fleet has
been assembled.
Mansfield said it appeared the
United States has told Chiang not
to retaliate against the mainland
"I don't believe that Chiang will
be unleashed, he said.
Zablocki said Nationalist planes
have been dropping rice and leaf
lets, not bombs, on their forays
over Communist territory.
However, the Nationalists
ported today their artillery had
destroyed several Red gun post
tions and some Communist supply
dumps in the Quemoy area.
shoe as a weapon, fought it out
with matrons Marilyn Sperry and
Gail Rice.
Later the former showgirl was
released on $270 ball and ordered
to appear in court. Kupcinet was
freed on $263. He was ordered to
appear on misdemeanor drunk
driving charges.
Officers said Kupcinet went to
jail quietly, denied he was drunk
passed a coordination test but re
fused to take an lnloximeter ex
amination.
YOOR TRADE-IN MAKES TfTE DOWN PAYMENT
LABOR DAY TIRES
Sensational
r
illliilll
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SF Safety Fortified Cord Body for extra
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YOUR FIRESTONE STORE
6th and Pine
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734 So. 6th
Actor's Wife .
Granted Divorce
SANTA MONICA, Calif. (AP
The eight-year marriage of actor
Ernest Borgnine and his wife
" 1
rlei Borgnine yesterday.
will cost Borgnine at least a third
of a million dollars in the next
15 years.
She charged cruelty, and the
Academy Award winner did not
contest her suit. Custody of a
daughter, Nany Allison, 6, was
awarded to Mrs. Borgnine
Borgnine agreed to pay $115
monthly child support, give Mrs,
Borgnine the $45,000 family home
and pay her 12'j per cent of his
gross income or a minimum of
$2,000 monthly for the next 15
years.
IN SALEM . . . Greater Oregon
STATE FAIR
Aug. 28 thru Sept.
Tt. ul'mI's Greet
MIDWAY
17 THRILL WDE5
BIG STAGE
JIMMIE
RODGERS
Auq. 28 thru
Sept. 2
SPORTSMEN
QUARTET
Low Prkes, All Sizes and Types
T?rt$tOfte
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NEW TREADS
i Apptna on aouna iw ooawf
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PW4 W and KKoppabW ftr.
AND
W. KERNS
WARNER IMPROVES
CANNES. France fUPI) - U.S.
movie magnate Jack Warner. ES.
who suffered a skull fracture and
crushed ribs in an auto accident
here Aug. 5, may be released
from the hospital in "several
weeks." his doctors reported
Tuesday.
V (HIMOMHOIDVJ
y YEARS
,'."7"1 """j in "'
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fl?tT?KTTHEa
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MONROE
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Plus Other
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Day Tire Sale . -
Phone TU 4-8109
Phone TU 4-4197
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