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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 21, 1959)
PAGE 2 A HERALD AND NEWS. Klamath Falls. Ore. Wnrlnesflav. October 21, 195!) Actor Charles Coburn, 82, Weds Widow Half His Age HOLLYWOOD AP) - Actor Chirles Coburn, 82 has brought home a bride a widow just half his ate. He caught the film colony by . surprise Sunday when he flew to Las Vests. Nev., and married Winifred Jean Clements Natzka She is 41. They returned home Plea Altered In Theft Case Herman Marion Gallup. 43. 4839 Climax Avenue, chanjed his plea en a petty larceny charge to guilty at noon Tuesday. Gallup appeared before District Judge D. E. Van Vactor to change (he plea he had entered Mon day. State police charged Gallup with stealing two quarts of wine and a sirloin steak from Oregon Food Store No. 3 on Saturday. Gallup had been scheduled (or trial Wed nesday night at 7:30. He was sentenced to spend four months in the county jail. Sunday night. A TWA hostess aboard the plane to Hollywood said the cou ple held hands all the way. Oc casionally, she said, Coburn bent over and kissed his bride's hand. Coburn and his new wile have known each other seven years. She was married to New York nncra basso Oscar Natzka. but he died eight years ago. She has two tons, aged 8 and 13. The blonde 41-year-old account ant is from New Zealand. To indicate just how quiet Co bum lionl his nlans. his aacni and longtime friend. Jay Faggcn. said the actor didn't even tell his servants. "That's the way he does things," said Faggcn. He disputed reports that Coburn was unable to climb the stairs to liie marriage license bureau. "He's still quick on his feet and sometimes he will dance all night at a party," said Faggcn. "He loves good times, good food and action." Coburn filled out a marriage ap plication while he was seated in a car, outside the county clerk's office. The ceremony was performed a few hours later in the chambers Dog Imbibes; Owner Fined KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) -"1 don't drink bourbon," tavern owner Floyd Baker told Judge C. Clyde Myers in City Court Tues day. The partly-empty pint bottle of bourbon that vice squad officers lound in his beer parlor was for "my French poodle," Baker said. "Now does your poodle drink whisky regularly?" Baker was asked. "No," he replied, "just at cer tain times." Specifically, just those times when the poodle was about to be come a mother. Judge Myers fined Baker $200 on charges of possessing liquor ard maintaining a nuisance. of Justice of the Peace J. L Howler. It marked the end of 27 years as a widower for the veteran ac tor. He was married for 31 years to actress hah Wills, who died in 1932. Cohurn recently told an inter viewer: "Don't ever believe that beauty and charm are the exclusive pro perty of youth. Like smooth bran- ily, sex appeal improves with age." YouLChecking Account means a lot to us! We Pay the Postage Both Ways When You Bank -by-Mail For customers who prefer to make deposits through the mail, First Western provides all necessary forms and envelopes and, best of all, PAYS THE POSTAGE BOTH WAYS! First Western Bank AND TRUST COMPANY Member Fadtral Deposit Insurance Corporation CBS Mulls Fake Effects NEW YORK (APt-The Colum bia Broadcasting System is con sidering whether it should con tinue to use phony applause and laughter on some television shows. A spokesman for the network said Monday night CBS is review ing the use of "canned" applause and other practices in light of a recent statement by CBS Presi dent Frank Stanton. Stanton said in New Orleans last Friday that all big money quiz shows were being eliminated by CBS and added: "We accept the responsibility for content and quality and for assurance to the American people that what they see and hear on CBS programs is exactly what it purports to be." For years, even on the big radio shows long before TV was devel oped, loud applause and uproari ous laughter on one show were recorded for use on other shows. The CBS spokesman said the network also was reviewing the "spontaneous" interviews that ac tually had been rehearsed, and shuws purporting to take place in one locale that actually had been filmed elsewhere. The spokesman was Kidder Ev- erard Meade Jr., executive direc tor of the CBS Information Serv ices. Ladies' & Misses' Blouses Exceptional Value . . . Cotton , . . Wing Collars . . . Sissy Fronts ... All Over Embroidery . , . Overblouses And Tuckins. $ 1 98 $ A 98 Nylon Tricot SLIPS Fashion Sheaths Embellished With Lace And Glowing Ap plique. Tailored Sheaths With Dainty Embroidery Trim. Choose From Sparkling White . . . Cor al . . . Riviera Blue . . . Rose . . . Pink . . . Beige . . . Red . . . Block . . . White. 298 $0 and J 98 Special Purchase LINGERIE Baby Doll Pajamas Nylon Tricot . . . Lace Trim and Embroid ery. Capri Length Pajamas. Sizes S.M.L. $0 98 $ 0 ond 5 98 Nylon Tricot Gowns Long and Waltz Length . . . Embroid ery ond Lace Trim . . . Many Styles And Colors. SO 98 $ J ond 5 98 BUY ON REVOLVING CHARGE OR LAY-AWAY PLAN Low, Low Prices Plus Gren Stamps ID aid ID I M llD i i I lul U H W oil 4480 So. 6th Next to Oregon Food Memoirs Eyed By 'Protege' SAN FRANCISCO (AP) At 17, blonde Beverly Aadland is al ready planning her memoirs. Miss Aadland also plans to re sume her show business career. "Show business is all I know," she said at the home of attorney Melvin Belli, a friend of Enol Flynn. Miss Aadland said she has been asked to write a story of her life with the dashing actor-playboy "I've been thinking of writing the story of my life before that too," she said. "I'd write it my self. I think I'm the only person who could do it." Flynn was buried Monday at quiet ceremonies in Los Angeles. At about the same time, Miss Aadland, wearing a black sack dress, held a news conference at Belli's Telegraph Hill apartment here. One reporter asked: "Do you like sack dresses or are you expecting?" Flynn's young girl friend never quite answered. "Errol bought me this dress," she replied with a smile. "He liked it very much." "But arc you expecting?" "We had hoped for that very much," Miss Aadland said. "Just say that's one thing we wanted very badly." a: . . , V . , - : Ivy . 1 'A v 1 Jewelry Exhibit Scheduled; Made By Southwest Indians L -(Lm2tMasz . TV's tvVf ' " ;g -2. - -.,'.' It-': VIOLA JAMES 'DENNIS THE-MENACE" ' OW COMB WE'RE HAVM" OWNER WITH PSOPL& WHO OOUT BATAffn?' By RUTH KING A display of the exquisite genuine turquoise and sterling silver jewel ry made by hand by the Navajo, Zuni and Hopi Indians of the Southwest, will be shown Thurs day, Friday and Saturday of this week at Beachs Jewelers, 834 Main Street. The exhibit is being loaned by Mrs. Luclla (Clyde) James, now living in Klamath Falls with her family after returning from a 10 year stay in Taos, New Mexico. Many of the interesting and priceless items are "pawn jew elry," which have been turned over for cash or merchandise for various reasons and have never been redeemed. These jewels, often heirlooms handed down from generation to generation, are wide ly sought by collectors and others who admire the intricate work of the native artists. Airs. James, who lived here some years ago, brought the jew els with her upon her return from Taos where she owned an exclu sive shop, the . Gay 90's. Mrs. James and staff members de signed exclusive custom made Southwest fashions which sold to visitors of the artists' colony at Taos and to motion picture peo ple. Viola James, pictured, Klamath Union Hi"h School junior m queen of the Ail-American Indian Basketball Tournament held last March at Chiloquin, models a signed turquoise and silver brace, let, designed and made by B. Tall, man. Navaio silversmith. Th ... ...v. CA, ccptionally heavy jewel is made o( genuine lurquuiic, aeiermined by dark veining. Her silver necklace is of squash blossom design, which denotes fer. tility. The horseshoe shaped em blem is a "circle of life." Nearly all Indian designs are ta':en from nature, Mrs. James ex. plains. Viola's gown, typically Navajo, is of midnight blue velvet, mads in the Navajo mode. The public is invited to view lh. collection. 4-H NEWS MERRILL ABC SEWERS The second meeting of the Mer. . rill 4-H ABC Sewers was held on October 14. Roll was called and all members were present. VV planned the club activities for the year. For a community project this month we are going to send a card and gift to Miss Hoffman. Myrene Cunningham, News Reporter. Closed Tonite Open Tomorrow 6:30 p.m. HIIII:H.IAW:iH They're together and nothing can tear 'em apart! JOHfl WAYNE -DEAN MARTIN RICKY NEISON RIO BRAVO TECHNICOLOR' AN6IE DICKINSON -WALTER BRENNAN WARD BOND Plus Co-Hit "Manhunt in the Jungle" Death Of Girl Told By Police ST. LOUIS. Mo. (AP) - Little Susan Kirk, 2li, was playing in the family station wagon. A but ton which sends a window glass up and down caught her interest. She leaned out the window and pushed the button. The window rose, forced her neck against the top of the door and she strangled. That is the way police recon structed her death Tuesday. Two Boy Scouts found her wedged in the window. Susan was the youngest of the Rev. Jon W. Kirk's live children. Transplants Eyed By MD WASHINGTON . (UP!) An American doctor suggests it may become common practice to re place damaged organs and tis sues with healthy spare parts from living or recently dead donors. This possibility is reported by Dr. John P. Merrill, director of the cardiorenal section at the Peter Bent Brigham Hospital in Boston. Writing in "Scientific Ameri can, Merrill said kidneys have been successfully exchanged be tween identical twins in 10 cases out of 13. 'These experiments," the mag azine said, "encourage the in vestigators to hope that other living tissues may eventually be routinely transplanted." A Soviet surgeon was quoted by the London Daily Herald Monday as saying he was pre paring to graft a new right leg en a 20-yc'ar-old girl who had lost hers in a train accident. The Russian, Dr. Vladimir De- mikhov, plans to replace the girl's lost leg with one taken from a newly dead person of about the same age," the news paper said. Krimmer is a gray fur resem bling astrakhan, made from the pelts of young lambs of the Cri mean peninsula. Klamath Falls, O iff on Serving Southern Oregon and Northern California Puhllahtd daily rxctpt Saturday by Southern Ore ton Pubhahtnc Company Main at Eipianadt Phone Tl'xrdo 4-lli FRANK JENKINS. Editor BILL JENKINS, Manaxm Editor FLOYD WYNNE. City Editor Entered aa aecond clans matter at the poit office, at Klamath Falls, Orrfon, on August 20. 11)06. tinder art of Con arena, March 3, 179. Second-claw postage paid at Klamath Falls. Oregon, nd at additional malllno off tecs. SUBSCRIPTION RATES Carrier 1 Month -,n., 1 !tO Months 9 9.00 1 Year $18 00 Mall In Advanca 1 Month . 1.50 9 Months 8 30 1 Year $1300 Carrier and Dealers Week days copy V Sundays, copy 10c UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATED PRESS AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION SuhscriHers not reretvlnf delivery nf their Herald and Newt, oleaie phone TUxedo 4111 before 7 PM After, T P M . phone Maurice Millar. Cir- culaUon Manager at TUxedfr 4-4731. mm a I If DOORS OPEN 6:45 TODAY! it profoundly moving story of cstalic but ill-fa tad young love EUZABETH MONTGOMERY TAYLORCUFTWINTER: In ACADEMY AWARO WINNER , GEORGE STEVENS Production of APIACE INIHESU bMMMASSEUE Mat M taM h CIOICE SltVtllS UtMHft fer MOUU RUM 4 MKT HOWf liMd W n. aii utKM Tiwiiir. tr THEODORE DREISER m IM MUCH MAWtr Htf Mm Mum.l r..,.i VMm Stalag 17 It's. William Holdtn't onatut rolt... In the rollicking, roistirlng story of our P.W. htrossl You'll laugh, cry, churl Stalag 17j SL, wiiliah7oldH i Prahctd d EkKtrt I, BitlY WltOER ..., 6iuYwuoe.lowiuj 0k i A''"' Out white man's rf. cflM tint ,v'li3S I i 1 .OVE AND ADVENTURE AS BOLD AND DARING AS THE CASTING! wyscMtew ISM Ji IN COLOR IE AN SE RVAIS 0G HNIN IEX IltSSIH im tun . mm in urn Nm . COLOR m ml -I ITiim ' EDDIE ALBERT PAUL MASSIE LILLIAN GISH