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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (July 29, 1959)
if PACK TWO HERALD AND NEWS. Klamath Falls. Ore. Wednesday. Julv 23. 1959 I i i. 'J DROWNS WORCKSTKR, MASS. (AP) -Robert Enlwistle. 20, swam out lnlo Green Hill Park pond Tups- day night to retrieve a child's ball and drowned. CI'CM DAILY 7:DO P. H ENDS TONIGHT! FEELING Am TOMORROW! THE ONE GREAT STORY OF THE U S. MARINES! I m niiii mi imtii Wagner Wynter Hunter Lunge llllllll Mill IIIIU Dillman North Nuyen Ti lr!lVl?!li-!l'f HiWTV",-ffll , " m- w 1 H.xF.r,! II Villi? W H,sFir,t Bi! Motion Picture' VIRGINIA MAYO BRIAN KflTH Actor Says Wide Screen Is On Way Out; Wants To Picture People, Not Air By HOB THOMAS AP Movie-TV Writer HOLLYWOOD lAPi Are movie audiences getting fed up with big ness on the theater screens? Greg ory Peck thinks so. Bigness came in with a bang when the movies sullered the com petition of the small home screen. Hollywood thought It had to give the people larger scope. That thinking brought on Cinemascope. Cinerama. Visiavision, Todd-AO and the type of films that could fill such immense screens. But too often the characters got smaller as the scope grew bigger. The time has come to reverse the trend, says Peck. "I'm fed up with crowd scenes and spectacles," he remarked "I believe the time has come lo find out what goes on inside of people, not on, the outside. The province of pictures today should be develop real people, put them in interesting situations and see what happens to them." For just such reasons, he is now portraying F. Scott Fitzgerald in "Beloved Infidel." This is the story of the jazz age author's ro mance with Columnist Sheilah Graham during his Hollwood de Peck never met Fitzgerald. He arrived here as an actor two years after the novelist's death in 1!MI. "You hear it both ways," he said. "Some say that Scott cre ated terribly embarrassing scenes at parties. Others say that he was quiet and always sat in a corner "Some say that he wrote bril liantly. But David Selznick told me he was incapable of writing a dramatic scene that had a be giiming and ending and developed into something. "At any rate, I am not attempt ing an imitation. I don't look like Scott and I am not a night club imitator. I can only do what I can lo capture the essence of the man and hope that his friends will feel that I haven't done him violence." "DENNIS THLr'MENACE Governor To Attend Meet SALKM (API Gov. Mark Hat field and his party will leave Portland by plane Thursday for Puerto Rico, where he will attend the National Governors Confer ence. He will return Aug. 7. Accompanying the governor will be Mrs. Hatfield; Travis Cross, his press secretary; Miss Leolyn Barnett, his personal secretary Freeman Holmer, state finance director; and William Newell, Hatfield's chauffeur. Slate Adj. Gen. Alfred Hinlz and his wife also are going to Puerto Rico for the conference, but are not flying with the Hat field party. Ihe Board of Control meeting will be Thursday. ! IIP ffiiiif ' I WAS GONNA Tea HER IT IVASNTA HAL SHRUNKEN! ' HEAD ..... ONLY J DIDN'T HAVE TIME ' Non-Tobacco Cigaret Set For Nationwide Try In Newest Cancer Research ACADEMY AWARD WINNER! BEST ACTRESS OF THE YEAR SUSAN HAYWARD '-,V Vii If WOMAN Fitoxi in Hn Cnit Nortli WM...riiu UM if ramsMt fhwa. Hukti brtit dn, MmKhi Mart mi lUaprit! STEPHEN BOYD EH BARBARA NICHOLS' SYDNEY BOEHM HENRY HATHAWAY QnemaScopE COLOR t, DE LUC In IM IHwlii M Hlfti FkVM, SKMOPHOWC SOlINO DOORS OPEN 6:45 I Feature or "1 OPFtd i - ... ... I Hy DEI.OS SMITH ll'l Science Editor NEW YORK (UPI) - Scientists are interested in a cold-turkey and mass scale lest which they feel will show why many people are so devoted to cigarcts they can't stop smoking them. These people, in the scientific view, are addicted and the ques tion is whether the addiction is mainly psychological is nicotine habit - forming drug when broken down by fire into smoke. or are these people addicted to cigarcts because smoking them an outlet for inner tensions? Scientists believe a lot of light will be thrown on this question in the fall when cigaret smokers from coast to coast are offered a cigaret which contains abso lutely no nicotine for the convinc ing reason that it contains no tobacco. Thai's mass scale and it's large enough to mean something. The cold turkey angle is this: These tobacco-less cigarets are going to be sold ort a "scare" basis. Cigaret smokers will be reminded of the widely held sci entific opinion that there is a connection between tobacco cig aret smoking and lung cancer. The argument will be made thai tobacco cigarets are harmful but tobacco-less cigarets are harm less. Will , cigaret smokers switch from tobacco lo non-tobacco appreciable numbers? If cigaret smoking is mainly a psychologi cal attachment, they should have no particular difficulty in switch ing when given such a powerful "motivation" (to use a term of psychologists. . But if the smoke formed . by burning picoline is habit-forming, cigaret smokers especially vet eran smokers will draw no sat isfaction from a tobacco-less fire and they'll find switching more or less impossible. It will all be told by the sales figures for the tobacco-less cigaret 'in the months' following its nationwide introduction. It's trade ' name ' is ' "Van guard.". Instead of tobacco, it contains a blend of "vegetable fibers." The manufacturer is the Buntob ("Ban Tobacco") Prod ucts Corp. The identity of the fibers is a corporate secret. "Vanguard" has been test marketed in Dayton, Ohio, accom panied by advertising based on Ihe slogan, "smoke without fear." Manufacturing facilities have been acquired and the plan is to "go national sometime in mid-autumn." The president of Bantob is Ger ald M. Schaflander, former ex ecutive in the Kaiser Industries, and a former account executive for a well known tobacco cigaret in an advertising agency. His specialty is sales promotion, The company has had a num ber of scientific tests made of its secret vegetable fibers to show that they contain no arsenic 'you can find traces of arsenic in most tobaccos) that they contain no nicotine, and they contain no "tobacco tars." - However, the "vegetable ti ers" have not been tested except under Bantob auspices. Anything that is burned produces "tarsi' and other "combustion products" arid these' are cancer-causing sus pects as regards tobacco cigarets, rather than arsenic or un combusted nicotine. Ausiralians Developing New Drip-Dry Woolens MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) -Australian women .soon will be wearing thin drip - dry woolen frocks and blouses. Drip dry woolen sports shirts resembling seersucker cottons will be available for men. " The drip-dry woolens" are the latest development in an intense research campaign aimed at mak ing woolen garments as readily washable as any garment made from synthetic fibers. Wool is Aus tralia's leading export. How much it is used determines to a great cxlent the nation's prosperity. After .years of research, two MciDourne tirms and a govern ment research organization have evolved processes giving wool the Lost Herder Found Alive SUPERIOR. Mont. lAP) .loo Servel, 67, of Yakima, who had heen missing for three days in rough Western Montana mountain country, was found alive Tuesday night at the bottom of a stecD. j rocky canyon. Sheriff Francis Tamietti said Servel was suffering from shock and exposure and was unable to give a coherent account of His wanderings. Servel, barefoot, his feet and lees badlv srraneri from rnr-W anri underbrush, was hospitalized jhere. He apparently had little food or water for 72 hours. Servel. co-owner of the Faure Jt- Servel Sheep Co., was discovered in me same rugged area where one of the firm's Daektrain nnpr- ators, William Cormack, 55. of Ya kima, was found dead Sunday. John Faure of Yakima, Servel 's partner, said Servel disappeared from their remote sheep camp sometime Saturday. The vm about 15 miles from here, was the same one for which Cormack was bound when he disappeared. I VOTE i HONOLULU (API-Mr Rhn W lnl..,. ...L- .... ... wiiu gave nirth to a SI rl SlinHav ninht r,tt I i r3 '"51"- icu iilt nospnai Tuesday to vote in Hawaii's first Itttxtn lltrt inn Then she went hn.L in t Ipilal bed. drip-dry qualities of nylon, dacron and other synthetics.- The firms of F. R.. and C. H. Fogarty says its fabric has a rip ple efleft resembling that of seer sucker cottons'. The dnip-dry .attribute is woven into the material. Fogarty's says the drip - dry woolens "breathe" like all woolen garments, absorb moisture, and are cool in summer and warm in winter. The classic weaving mills is selling processed fabric to manu facturers for Australian spring fashions. "Already we have had inquiries from a leading and most exclusive fashion house in the United i Slates," it said. The Gold Coast and Nigeria in A(i ita 1 produce about half the world's cocoa.: - Nation Wide VAN SERVICE House to House City to City State to State EAD'S TRANSFER t STORAGE Bonded & Licensed Brokers 553 Market TU 2-4678 i . mm ij i n i iiu JIM frf.trtJlVrtl il M ROCK 'N ROLL (Aug. 1st) DOORS OPEN 6:45 SiadA TODAY! mm -A W ! IKll lit . i U II il itjllllllir I I f: mi ...ACTUALLY PHOTOGRAPHED IN GIANT-SCREEN COLOR... IN EQUATORIAL . AFRICA! . i ruunuiiT mtisf GORDON SCOTT ANTHONY QUAYir SARA SHANE MALL MACGINNIS SEAN CONNERY-SCILLA GABEL IT Willi HAUB WW QUIUl'WH -MKNI BUK m KWN GUHllRWI i CHUlCMf tllO You'll Learn the Terrifying Secret the Hideous OBSESSION of... The Man Who Could Cheat Death TECHNICOLOR mZC .fT ll'JIIIVM From the producers who tsve YOU "IHE CURSE OF FtAHKEHSTEIH" ind mcuur Unemployed Up Over Oregon SALEM (AP) Unemployment gained about six per cent in Ore gon last week compared with the week before, the state Depart ment of Employment reported Monday. It said many lumber companies were closed down be cause of high fire danger. A total of 7,859 persons filed claims for unemployment' compen sation last week, compared with 7,399 the previous week. ' A year ago, the total was 17,198. The department said that'the fish packing industry should pick up when the season reopens Wed nesday, and that canning plants should be operating at capacity within a week. Boys Urged To Keep It Snooty - MALVERN, England (AP) Boys at one of England's swankiei schools have been advised dis erectly: "Dating town girls just isn't done." Young gentlemen at Malvern College instead should . choose their girl friends from three or four expensive private scjiools nestling in the surrounding hills. Wolf whistles arc out and local belles are asked to look the other way as the boys in black" jackets pass. . Call it advice." said 49-year- old Headmaster Donald Lindsay, 49. "discreet advice." It is not snobbery, you know," the headmaster added. "'It is a question of manners. Boys will be boys if you let them." Klamath Fulls. Oregon -Sorvioi Southern Ore Ron and Northern California Puhhihefl daily except Saturda by Southern Orejioo Publishing Company wain at esplanade Phone TUxedo 4-8111 TRANK JENKINS. Editor BILL JENKINS, Managlnf Editor FLOYD WYNNE. CiLv Edltnr Entered ai aecond clas matter at the pott office at Klamath Falls, Orrfon. on Auguat 30, 1906, under act of Conirfu, March 3, 1R79. Second-clam postage paid at Klamath rails, Oregon, nd at additional malting offices. SUBSCRIPTION RATES Cairfer t 1 Month- .,.... 9 l.jio Monthi ooo 1 Year ,,.... tianp Mat) In Advance 1 Month f 1 so 6 Months .... i .to 1 Vear , 113 00 Carrier and Dealers Week days, copy ,-Ac Sundays, copy lot UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATED PRESS AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION Subscribers not receiving delivery ot their Herald and News, please phone TUxedo 4-A1I1 before T P.M. After PH. phone Maurice Miller. Cir- eulatton Manager al TUxtdo 4-4751 AUDITORIUM SAT. MIGHT featuring LYMAN and the SUEDES PLUS "THE TWILIGHTS" $1.00 PER PERSON - DANCING 9-1 COMING ATTRACTIONS Lloyd PRICE "Fors" DOMINO Mon., Aug. 17 ' Fri., Aug. 28 i ' I yn l-irfi irfTriitrirriv'fi '1 Vrff-niiirfi-iTif TVtifiiihva i SENSATIONAL SAVINGS ON QUALITY APPAREL N SUITS! Drastically Reduced Reg. 89.95 to $100 now $65 Reg. 68.50 to 72.50 now $45 Reg. 39.95 Suits now $25 SPORT SHIRTS SHORT AND LONG SLEEVE REDUCED Vi Reg. 4.95 ' NOW 3.35 Reg. 5.95 NOW 3.95 Reg. 6.95 NOW 4.65 SLACKS - REDUCED 1 3 Reg. 17.95 now 11.95 Reg. 14.95 now 9.95 1 iti 7 IV YES! EVEN AT THESE SALE PRICES WE GIVE ' GREEN ySTAMPSy SPORTCOATS reg. 37.50 to 39.95 - now $25 reg. 25.00 to 34.95 -- now $20 Just Added to the Sole - Famous Brand RAIN COATS Reg. 25.75 now 12.88 ManBaananHaBHMMiMMaMi Home of Fins Brands - Plus ZM" Green Stomps - 6th and Moin Gene Favell, Prop.