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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 16, 1958)
PAGE 2 A HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON THURSDAY, OCTOBER IB. 1953 NEGOTIATIONS UNDERWAY FDR Offsprinq McCLOUD Negotiations are un-l , dcr way this week between Ihe fcnterS rOllflCS USFS and The McCloud River Lumber Company for the sale of 136.000 board feet of ponderosa pine timber, located at Mt. Shasta Forest tree farm 12 miles east of McCloud. The sale was advertised without a bidder signifying a de- sire to obtain the limber, probably due to small timber and slight volume, USFS personnel stated. Removal of the trees is to facili tate the clearing of 10 additional acres of land for expansion of the nursery and the construction of a small plantation exhibit area. MEEKER, Colo. 'API - Elliott Roosevelt has joined the political ranks. The eldest son of the Iale Presi dent Franklin D. Roosevelt is the new Democratic chairman of Rio Blanco County. It's his first official participa tion in politics, but it may not oe his last. There were rumors Roosevelt, who operates the Rolling R Ranch in northwestern Colorado, may run lor Colorado governor in 12. OPEN DAILY 6:00 p.m. TODAY! Of Dectncy Clou "A" Raring GINA LOLLOBRIGIDA ANTHONY QUINN THE HUNCHBACK NOTRE DAME Feature Af 6:45 & 10:10 PLUS 2nd HIT! fr'T'S f jfl!,''WAI.T DlSNFY.. i SHOWN AT 8:15 ONLY I-L-4.III 111"! - I I HUM I 1 DOORS CPEN 6:3C1 P. M -Ends TONITE JOHN WAYNE In "Barbarian and the Geiiha" Starts FRIDAY! 1 -r Mm mmmmm 1 fflMW Ml" m ism -BIG- WTUP mm COUNTRY in TECHNICOLOR TECHNIRAMA Co-sioeing CHARLES BICKFORD CHUCK. CONNORS DENNIS THE MENACE" A Producer And A Writer Team Up In Partnership By BOB THOMAS AP Motion Picture Writer HOLLYWOOD (AP) "We're paying two actors a million and a half dollars and neither of us has a maid. Our wives do the cooking." This was the happy admission of Martin Rackin and John Lee Mahin, a couple of movie mav ericks who could write a new chapter in the history of free en terprise. Picture these two guys: Mahin, a tall, chunky, soft-spoken master of the film writing craft with cred its all the way from "Scarface" and "Red Dust" to "The Bad Seed" and "No Time for Ser geants;" Rackin, a glib, friendly fellow who once wrote gags for Red Skelton, graduated to film i urge: writer and producer. I lure. Together they could point to a half-century of toil in the movie mills. And they could earn hefty salaries working for studio bosses. "But we weren't satisfied," Rackin explained. "When you're working for a studio, you never get to roll the dice yourself. You write. a picture for Marlon Brando and you end up with a second rate actor saying your lines. Or you change a whole script to make it fit Gary Cooper. You never do things the way you want them done." Producer Rackin and writer Ma hin were working on a Pearl Buck script for Warner Brothers when their minds met in the common "THEN HOW'rJOuT A PENNY? I'll PULL IT FOR A PEW! okay ? Just a pewy ! okay ? Atlanta Temple Bombings Probed By Special Staff ATLANTA, Ga. (AP)-A special iRalio-TV stations WSB and WSB police stalf went into seclusion as;TV received a call from a man they pressed harder than ever to day for a solution to the dyna mite explosion which shattered a large portion of a Jewish temple. Reliable sources said it was un derstood the FBI expected to solve the case today. N. II. John son, in charge of the FBI oflice here, declined comment. The blast before dawn Sunday was the first anti-Semitic violence in Atlanta but the fourth in the South this year. It caused $200, 000 damage to The Temple. The police staff directing Hie in vestigation here moved to an un disclosed site late Wednesday. Capt. J. L. Moseley said requests for informal ion from news media had reached the point where they were intcrlering with the investigation. Two more bomb threats were made Wednesday night by tele phone but nothing came of oil her. who said the Atlanta Journal-Con stitution building would he bombed next. Extra policemen have been on duty at the building since similar threat was made Sunday night. WSB and WSB-TV, which is owned by the newspapers, said it received a second call later, ap parently from the same man, who said the station also would be blown up. Five persons being held by the police were questioned by the FBI. Police said a search of the residences of two of the men turned up two letters, one of which Ihreatened the Atlanta Jew ish community. The other con tained hatc-mongering correspond ence from another slalc. Officers said the letters and a statement by one of those arrested tied two other persons in custody to a group that met here last May to plot the bombing of The Temple. Japanese Women Adopt Western Ideas Of Makeup (Editor's Note: L'PI Women's Editor Gay Pauley is on a trip to the Far East reporting on the lesser known facets of daily liv ing there.) "Let's make our own pic- Stiff Stock Mart Credit Goes Into Effect Today WASHINGTON (APt-The Fed eral Reserve Rnard today put into effect the stillest slock market credit restraints in nearly 12 years. The board's purpose: to discourage speculation with bor rowed money. The board announced plans Wednesday to increase to !)0 per cent the margin, or minimum down payment, required on pur chases of stocks. The minimum margin had been 70 per cent since Aug. 5. when it was raised from SO per cent. The latest action means invest ors hencclorth must put up at least $.10 in cash lor every $10(1 of stock they buy. It does not have any retroactive eltect on slocks bought when margins were lower. Only once before have margins been this high when they were loo per cent in the first year after World War II. Wall Street had been expecling DOORS CPEN b:3D P. M . Today! j i vi UjAaujnr vi v i t v'i'i T;U an increase and some slock ana lysis said they believed the action had been discounted in advance. The market reached an all-time high Monday but prices fell in heavy trading Tuesday and vVednesday. When the reserve board raises margins, the aim is In prevent excessive use of credit in the slock market. If too much bor rowed money moves into the market, less is available for use hy borrowers in other sectors of lb" economy. G. Keith Funslon. president of the New York Stock Exchange, said credit on that exchange totals sj.ioo.ooo.nno.. He said this is only 1.3 per cent of the total market value of the stocks. Funston said slock market cred it has not kept pace with increases in slock prices or with nongovern ment credit in the rest of the economy. A reserve hoard spokesman said loans by brokers and banks for purchasing slocks totaled $4,300,- 000,000 at the end of September. He said this was the largest amount since this type of statistic was first collected during the 10,'IOs. Brokers' loans had increased 20 per cent this year and hank loans for slock purchases are up 8 per cenl. he said. Republican Aide To Yisit Basin Mrs. Collis Moore. Republican national commitleewoman for Oregon will he present in Klam ath Falls October 17 for a meet ing with GOP parly workers at a (the talks. dinner, to be followed by an open n meeting at 8 p in in Republican ff headquarters, 103i Main Street. The public is invited to meet Mrs. Moore and to hear a dis cussion on the measurrs on the November ballot by David Card, assistant chairman of the Klam ath County Republican Central Committee. A meeting at Republican head quarters, scheduled for Thursday night has been postponed until Fri day night and Mrs. Moore's arri val, A eolfer between 4:30 and 5:30 p.m. at headquarters has been arranged in her honor. Alice Plcfferle. Klamath Falls, chairman of the Klamath County Young Republicans and Fred Heard. Klamath Falls, freshman in political science. I'niversity of Oregon, assistant chairman of the Young Republican Federation of Oregon will ne in charge of head quarters Saturday. By GAY PAULEY L'PI Women's Editor TOKYO (CPU East is begin ning to see eye to eye and nose to nose with the West in mat ters of makeup. The ideal ot beauty in Japan is so westernized that today some Japanese girls are getting nose bobs and eyelid operations to; resemble more closely their sis-! ters in Europe and the United States. And for almost all, coif fures and makeup are copied right out of the latest Western beauty and fashion magazines. "Plastic surgery for the nose and eyelids is a post-war trend," said Mrs. Aiko Yamano, who with her husband operates one of the largest beauty schools in the world. Her school here in Tokyo trains 5,000 students a year from Japan. Okinawa and Singapore. She also has beauty shops in this country and South America, and stages television demonstrations in hair-styling and makeup for do-it-yourselfers. Mrs. Yamano, a small, viva cious woman, said she can show the Oriental miss how to shadow her nostrils and give the face the Western "three dimensional" look, with a "high" instead of flat nose. But she also works with plastic surgeons in planning the same re sults on a permanent basis. She said many Japanese also are having facial surgery to cre ate the double eyelid, which na ture gave us Westerners. Plastic surgery, she said, cosls much less in Japan than in the United Slates a nose operation here is available for as little as 10.000 yen. or about $28 compared j with the $500 or more it costs in America. "Some girls get operations with out telling their husbands but when the baby is born with a flat nose, the husband finds out," she explained, laughingly. Makeup follows the West to the warm pink tones for fall and win ter; and the Japanese girls use blue or green eyeshadow even for daytime. In summer, the copper tones of makeup are used and Mrs. Y'amano said "We've even taken to the great American fad lor sun-tanning." "All Japanese hair styles are in fluenced bv the American and French," she said. "But here, the French is a little more popular, because it is softer. Our girls like a slightly tousled look: this fall I'm doing the tumble cut. . .much like the old poodle in length, brushed up, but not curly." A trip to a beauty shop in Ja-i pan is a bargain compared with prices in most state-side shops. Small, neighborhood shops charge 2."0 yon (it takes 3M to make $1) lor shampoo and set: on the Gin za. Tokyo's Fifth Avenue, the price is 500 yen and up. This is minus lips; but tipping is prac ticed only at the swankier, cosmo politan shops. Mrs. Y'amano. who has been a beautician for 35 years and says all six of her sons are following her and her husband in the held, commented that it was a little sad to see the influence of the West so overwhelming. "I've always considered our own black hair beautiful," she said. "But some of our girls are even bleaching. Not so radical as a Marilyn Monroe blonde but to light auburn. I think the Japanese girl is lovely as she is. . .but as j long as she isn't satisfied thati way, well at least it is good fori our business. Both had been fond of a Civil War novel by Harold Sinclair. "The Horse Soldiers." It had kicked around town with no takers for the film rights. So they made a deal for a free option. They bade farewell to Warners and embarked on Mahin-Rackin Productions. "Y'ou're nuts," they were told. The two men pondered who would be the ideal director for their varn. Their No. 1 choice was John Ford, great director of ac-i Hon films and an expert on the Civil War. He accepted. On a visit to Ford's house, they met John Wayne, who signed the contract and got his costumes be fore he even read the script. William Holden was encountered at a party, liked the sound of the project and joined the team. The outlay: $750,000 plus 20 per cent of the profits apiece to Holden and Wayne; $250,000 plus 20 per cent to Ford. "We don't mind," Rackin said Oo your window! sweat? STORM WINDOWS Made to Measure FREE ESTIMATES George Clark airilv. "You gotta give away to get in this business. And even if we don't get, it'll be worth it. We've had the time ot our lives." TONIGHTI with GLENN DAVIS All-Time Army Great I Exciting highlights of pro-footbill gamcs.-.plus on-the-f iold Interviews with top stars. Brought to you by Ou Pont ZEREX antifreeze. 8:00 P.M. CHANNEL 2 HI j latttr Thlnfli lor BsMM lM0aaV Cwiii I -j III " i I Be .s ssnissTat ' MlHUIsgM &f 5 EXOTIC SPICES 1 j flHiv ' IN GENUINE I f (UlflUVUfll mi MEET WITH HUSSEIN AMMAN. Jordan (VPP A U.S. military mission headed by Brig. Gen. Richard Risden met with King Hussein Wednesday. Premier Samir Rifai also participated in AERIAL TANKER McCLOl D - A Redding based aerial tanker was used in con trolling a small forest lire near Cat itle Camp, east of McCloud. last week. The nunter-sinokor caused Hue was extinguished by Ash Creek and Pondosa I'SFS fire i crews. A small hunlrr -caused fire ;was controlled at Lit tic Bear Flat, siHUh ot Pondoa. October 13 by I'SFS lire fishlffs Th fue as controlled alter burmv ie:iy 'one tenth ot an ac; ot f uU .Umber. 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