HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON SUNDAY, AUGUST 31. 1958 Oleason Returning To TV After A Year's Absence "DENNIS THE MENACE 1 1 Many Awards Set For FFA, 4-H Members At Lake Fair PfAGE 2 A By CHARLES MERCER NEW YORK (AP)-Jackie Glea ion is returning to weekly tele vision after a year's absence. He will have a half-hour all comedy variety program. The show starts Oct. 3 (8:30 p.m. EST) over CBS-TV. It is similar to the one he had two years ago: the Gleason gallery of characters Ithe Poor Soul, Reggie Van Glea son, etc.) abetted by Buddy Hack ett; girls (six in number rather than the more numerous June Taylor dancers); music by the Jackie Gleason Orchestra conduct ed by Ray Block. He will have no featured singer, and guests will be rare. Tour Changed By Townsend PARIS (AP) - Group Capt. Peter Townsend arrived in Paris today but steadfastly refused to say why he broke off his second world tour in Yugoslavia. The sudden change of plans touched off rumors he was going back to see Princess Margaret, who gave up his love because he was di vorced, but there was no confir mation of this speculation. Townsend had arrived in Yugo (lavia with announced plans to mane a mm ot a world tour, touching some of the spots he had found interesting on his earlier tour. He left suddenly Friday. (milEAWMMA It should be good news to mil' lions of viewers. If the nation's r,00 TV critics don't bother to tune in, Gleason couldn t care less. For those currently enjoying Gleason in The Honcymooners, the num ber one TV filmed re-run in the country, it may be confusing to near he s been away trom live television for a year. ' He's been writing, conducting and recording music. He's been thinking, reading and seldom turn ing on a TV set. He plays 54 holes of golf daily (shoots about 79) and in the process has lost 30 pounds He looks as if he'd be more at home at the Explorer's Club than at Toots Shor s drinking and eating establishment. While Gleason feels that he has read some valid criticism about himself, he believes TV critics general.iy perform a very minor service to the folks at home. Ho takes a dim view of the cliche ;:bout the danger of over exposure on television. "Kami! iarity might breed contempt," he says, "but you can't contain con tempt if you're laughing." As an actor, Gleason has turned down movie oflers which were based on the appeal of Gleason as a comedian: "When you give yourself away on television, you have to do something different to get them to pay to see you." As a comedian, ho feels that his greatest strength is in being able to play a variety of comic roles while most comedians play only tnemselvcs. On the other hand, speaking of Hackelt, he second banana on his new show, he says: "He's starting as second, but he'll end up first. Hes a great comedian mmmmm Win a 13,600 Swimming Pool, 2,U00 motor boat and 91 other prliea, ARROW FUEL CO. BALSIGER OIL CO. CLIFF YADEN'S FRANKFORD FUEL CO. GENERAL PETROLEUM JAY HAWK PETROLEUM PEYTON t CO. RICHFIELD OIL CO. SIGNAL OIL CO. WESTERN OIL AND . . BURNER CO. ARABS GET LOAN BERLIN (LTD - East Ger many granted the United Arab Republic a (20,250.000 loan in an economic agreement signed here Friday after six days of negoti filing. The East German press oil ice said the loan would be in the form of long - term deliveries of complete industrial plants, in dustrial equipment and machine tool products. There arc 1,755 daily newspapers in the U.S., serving virtually ev ery city, town and hamlet on the map, and ollenng community im pact no other medium can match. Adding Machines - Calculators FOR SALE - RENTAL - LEASE Factory TRAINED Service Technician CLIFFORD C. YOIGHTMgr. Friden Agency KLAMATH FALLS MEDFORD Phone 4-3716 41 So. Grape, Ph. SP 2-4100 COULDN'T CHANGE LOS ANGELES (AP) Actress Diane Varsi divorced her husband on testimony that he criticized her "whole way of life. The actress, 20, told Superior Court that her husband, John Dickson, 2B, "criticized everything did and tried to force me to make changes that were impossi ble for me to make." TV Quizzes Still Probed CHILDREN WHO MAKE MUSIC ARE HSlJt1J DI in am roATtM r irrijr A CHILDREN Love those youngsters of yours? Want to give them every advantage that strengthens their character? Then by ail means encourage them to play a musical instrument. Authentic, amazing case records prove beyond Soubt that: -makes Music stimulat a cnua Brighter in all school subjects. V Playing in groups promotes teamwork, discipline, tolerance, poise and self-confidence. Y Children who make music "are happy, wholesome, popular youngsters, so busy having fun they have no time or inclination for mischief. Musical training is a break your child deserves COM! TO U lot (jOUtl Ivtiy h.'d hm an aatiludt far tame liHlrumrnt, Ul ui ! fluiiU your thila- ! ana that Itodi i, lifa.tlme enjaymenl, Orep n temeew . ilindy ehicuiitan. toethtjsMuuc Co. 126 N. 7th Ph. TU 4-5121 if Ckl VAN S. MOLLISON Mollison Sets Seminar Term Among the 49 students from Washington and Oregon to attend the third annual seminar of the Washington Savings a nd Loan League will be Van S. Mollison, secretary of First Federal Sav ings and Loan Association of Klam ath Falls. The seminar will be held from September 7 to 12 on the Univer sity of Washington campus in Se attle. Mollison completed his first year's work in September, 1957, and has been invited to return as a second-year student this year. The faculty will include Dr. Ar thur R. Upgren. director of eco nomic studies of Macalestcr Col lege, Minnesota; Professor Edward E. Edwards, school of business, Indiana University and Austin Grimshaw, dean of the school of business administration, University of Washington. Norman Strunk, executive vice president of the United States Sav ings and Loan League, Chicago, and other leaders in the industry will conduct evening panel ses sions during the week. f 'f in yj . -Tjf . x-J1--"1 i ' 7 I it. 8id 'HOT MAW HUAWIM66IR0S SET 74TtiCi A FUNERAL' 'He's restim' 'cause this is UBtfVM.Joey. Ya 6ee, YviF hi- AWARDED a $200 scholar ship by Willamette Univer sity for academic standing is Orrin Ormsbee, son of Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Orms bee, 906 North Sixth Street. Orrin is a sophomore at Willamette. He is a politi cal science major now studying pre - law. The scholarship is $100 for tuition each semester. . " Soroptimisfs Change Title Soroptimist Club members have received official notification of a change in name to Soroptimist Federation of The Americas, Inc. The word international will no longer be used with individual club names, according to Edna Albrecht, local Soroptimist president. Borghild Hclgesen is the new governor of the Northwestern re gion of Soroptimists clubs of which the Klamath Falls club is a mem ber. She has indicated that Fed eration President Lily Quarnberg will attend the District 2 meeting to be held on October 11 and 12 at I The Dalles. Crete Ek of Dilling. Ostfold, Nor way, Soroptimist exchange student under the American Field Service Program, has arrived at Centralia, Washington. "She was amazed at all the cars and how Americans can eat so much butter, milk and bread and not be fat," the district governor reported. LAKEVIEW A number of spe cial awards await 4-H and FFA members who qualify for such during the 1958 Lake County Fair. Many of these are offered by the Lakeview Rotary Club as a por tion of its youth activities project. The following are Rotary awards: Special Breeding Award, $100 will be applied to the pur chase of a registered animal lor the boy or girl judged best in a livestock breeding project. Any 4-H member enrolled in beef, dairy, sheep or swine is eligible. second and third awards ot $75 and $50 will be made on the same basis. Contestants signify ahead of time their intention to compete Livestock Demonstration ' Con- General Lee Dies In York YORK. Pa. (AP) Lt. Gen. John C. H. Lee (Ret.), deputy commander under Gen. Eisen hower in Europe during World War II, died Saturday in York Hos pital. He was 71. Lee was admitted to the hos pital Aug. 24. Hospital officials said he suffered a cardiac disturb ance and had been listed in serious condition since his admis sion. The general was born Aug. 1, 1887, at Junction City. Kan. A member of the Corps of En gineers, he served in numerous posts around the world following his graduation from West Point in 1909. He was on Gen. Leonard Wood's staff in France during World War I. In the second war, he was depu ty commander under Eisenhower in charge of supply and communi cation in Europe. Later he was named commander of the Mediter ranean theater. Since his retirement in 1947, the general lived in York and was an active layman in the Episcopal church. Madame Chiang Kai-shek was graduated from Weilesley College in 1917. NEW YORK (AP) Producers of the television quiz show "Twenty-one" have released an 18-month old statement signed by Herbert Stempel. a former contestant, de nying his recent allegations that the show was not on the level. Daniel Enright, co-producer of "Twenty-One." Friday turned over the statement, signed by Stempel March 7, 1957, to New York County Dist. Atty. frank S. Ilogan. Enright quoted Stempel as say ing in his written statement. Any questions or answers which I gave were entirely my own and no aid or assistance were rend ered to me by Mr. Enright (Dan Enright. the producer) nor any of his staff." Stempel was quoled in news papers this week as saying he was coached on answers before he went on the air and then waa told to miss a question that enabled Charles van Doren to eliminate him. A statement issued Friday by Enright said that "other evidence is still being studied by the dis trict attorney's office." The New York Daily Mirror Saturday quoted Stempel as say ing: "Enright told me if I would sign the letter he would get me a job on the TV program "ric-Tac-Dough' at $250 a week." The newspaper added that the job never developed. A spokesman for "Twenly-one" DON'T PLAY POLITICS FALL RIVER, Mass. (AP) Campaign workers were stringing a political banner across Broad way. One of the dangling ropes caught on the bumper of a pass ing car. Ihe car pulled the third floor porch off a house to which the porch fell on a parked car, causing considerable damage. said Stempel never was promised a jod. He saifl stempel was used on two shows after he lost out on "Twenty-one" -- to warm up audiences but that he "froze the audience more than he warmed them." The district attorney's office' investigation of TV shows stemmed from a complaint by a former con testant of the now defunct "Dotto" quiz program. The Welcome Wagon Hostess Will Knock on Your Door with Gifts & Greetings from Friendly Business, Neighbors and Your Civic and Social Welfare Leaders On the occasion of: The Birth of a Baby Engagement Announcements Arrival ot Newcomers to Klamath Falls No cost or obligatlonl Phone TU 4-6185 Portland Jail Hit By Jury PORTLAND (AP) A county grand jury Friday said Portland city jail pnsonors live in crowded, squalid quarters without proper sanitation. The jury, in a report capping a three-month investigation, also criticized a juvenile home here and Ihe method of transporting prisoners from the county jail. Its main criticism, however, was aimed at the city jail which it said was built in 1912 to house 35 prisoners. "On the day we visited the place," the jury's report said, "we saw 125 men confined in one dormitory on one of the hottest days of the year, with only one loilet and one shower. "The odor from that particular quarter combined wilh the stench from the kitchen was beyond des cription." Mayor Terry Schrunk comment ed that the jail is crowded, but that it is undergoing a $132,000 remodeling program. "I don't see how they (the jury) could help but notice the work men on the joh there. We'll have more adequate quarters," Schrunk said. The mayor also said that a four- story addition to the jail will he built if a SWO.ooo bond issue is approved by voters in the Novem ber election. The jury, however, shrugged off the issue. The report said: "We are cer tainly convinced that another $600,000 is just a little bigger patch in trying to rehabilitate an impossible building. The city jail has been critized steadily by grand juries for the past two years. The Friday re-t port, however, contained the most ; stinging criticism. Included in the latest probe was: the county jail at Rocky Butte, i which the jury said was in fine condition. However. Ihe jury was critical ol prisoners being chained to gether openly while being trans ported from a bus to the court house in downtown Portland. "There should he some arrange ment to unload those prisoners in side without subjecting them to public gaze." A juvenile home here general ly is well run. the jury's report said, but the investi g a t o r s i Irowned upon mixing delinquents' and dependent children. "It is quite possible and juven-1 ile home makes as many delm-j quents as it cures," the report mid. OPErJ 6:3Q P. M. SUNDAY AND MONDAY Inttoducing-THE NEW PRESLEY A rocking, socking powerhouse of fantastic talent ELVIS PRESLEY MLHOUSt JUDY TYLER MiiutSHAUCMSSY Dean JONES Jennifer HOLDEN m Feature At 7:50 & 10:20 Dl..r 3 SPECIAL SHORTS T IU3- AND CARTOON TUESDAY AND .JMh WEDNESDAY 'SMr""? tests. A special award of $10 to ward expenses to the Oregon State Fair for the winning livestock demonstration team. Home Living Award. To the 4-H member selected by the official fair judge with the top project and work in the home living group. Food Preservation Award. A special award in canning to a jun ior and a senior group. Outdoor Cooking. A special award. Sweepstakes Cooking. The girl adjudged tops in all cooking proj ects in Lake County will receive an award of practical nature to be valued at not more than $50. Forestry. A special award. Garden. Special awards to win ners of junior group (9 to 12 years) and senior group (13 years and over). Demonstrations. Awards in food preservation, home living, forest ry, health, gardening and live stock. A junwr and senior award. The special Rotary awards for Future Farmers of America in clude: Prize not exceeding $25 to local chapter winner of farm mechanics program; not exceed ing $100 for best chapter farmer; a fund of $100 to be used by FFA delegates going to state or nation al convention; not exceeding $75 for grand winner of Livestock Breeding Project; champion rec ord book exhibited by FFA mem ber to receive $15 pen and pencil set. In addition to the above, Safe way Stores, Inc., will offer a sum mer school scholarship to any eli gible 4-H Club member complet ing a livestock breeding project. The Lake County Grade A Dairy Association and Lakeview Cream ery offer an annual award of a registered dairy heifar to a 4-H member who best qualified un der the rules, and who must agree to abide by them. The Oregon Wool Growers Auxil iary also offers cash awards for the best dinners at which lamb is served in the senior dollar din ner and junior dollar dinner con tests. CONTINUOUS FROM 12:45 P. M. NOW! MONDAY, Sept. 1 LAST BIG KID MATINEE BEFORE SCHOOL . WALT DISNEY'S "LITTLEST OUTLAW" Also WALT DISNEY'S "CARTOON FESTIVAL" Doors Open 1:30 Show Starts at 2:00 Out At 4:00 KIDS 25c ADULTS 75e SiaAiA Jodai i Ik RANDOLPH Scott in the place they called "Helltown-on-the Border" l"4tP wtmwm I 'ill FEATURE TIMES Buchanan at 3:14 - 6:41 - 10:08 Tank Force at 1:14 - 4:40 - 8:08 WHEN IRON MEN IN IRON MONSTERS ROUGHT FOR A CONTINENT! 1 THE BIG MAN ' GUN-WHIPS UP HIS BIGGEST! y zr i .it. 1 MJft tyyrSk. Craig Stevens Jennifer Holden Barry Kelley ... . M. ... ... V J The lo4t uatrot causht Tl . CC i lh croMfira u the battle ''HJFm 1 ll Jjj J raged from Benghaa to Tobmkt I A "JP1 VICTOR LEO Mr$PVl MATURE-GEN N SKtfe ft fcSai Italy's mottl ff i new film l ANTHONY NEWLEY BONAR COLLEANO ANNE AURREY-?-, IUCIANA PALUZZI