Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, July 29, 1959, Page 2, Image 2

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PACK TWO
HERALD AND NEWS. Klamath Falls. Ore.
Wednesday. Julv 23. 1959
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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!
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Wagner Wynter Hunter Lunge
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Dillman North Nuyen
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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.