anaheim-bulletin 1953-09-07
Searchable text
Editorial Page
4 — ANAHEIM (Cal.) BULLETIN Monday, September 7, 1958
Published Daily Evenings Except
Sundays and Holidays by
ANAHEIM BULLETIN PUBLISHING CO., INC.
$22 S. Lemon St. Anaheim, Calif. Phone $2251
HAZEL D. LOUDON, President
L. H. LOUDON, JR., Vice Pres. and Co-Publisher
STANLEY LOUDON, Co-Publisher and Treasurer
MILDRED TAGGART, Member of Board
RICHARD FISCHLE, JR., Secretary and Business Manager
DON SHAFFER, Editor
CARRIE LOU SUTHERLAND, Societie and Women's Department
C. WM. BLAND, Adv. Manager
Legalized in accordance California State Law December 26, 1951.
Entered as second-class mail matter August 16, 1938 at the post office at Anaheim, California under the Act of March 4, 1872.
Subscription Rates—1 month, $1.00; 3 months, $2.75; 6 months, $8.00
1 year, $9.50.
No additional charge for mailing within the continental United States.
Sales tax will be added to quoted prices on taxable items appearing in the advertising columns of the Anahelp Bulletin, same to be paid for by the purchaser as required by law.
UNITED PRESS
NATIONAL REPRESENTATIVES WEST-HOLLIDAY CO., INC.
New York—77 East 40th St.; Chicago—360 N. Michigan Ava.; San Francisco—435 Market St.; Detroit—31$ Stephenson Blvd.; Vancouver, BC—711 Ball Blvd.; Los Angeles—49$ So. Spring St.; Portland—350 W. Sixth St.; St. Louis—411 North Tenth St.; Seattle—40$ Stewart St.; Atlanta—936 Grant Building.
Shopping in Warsaw
When you walk into an American retail store, whether it be in one of our great cities or a small town, you take it for granted that a wide and attractive selection of dependable merchandise will be offered to you, at prices which are well within the means of most people.
The contrast with stores in communist countries, where the government owns or bosses everything and competition in our sense of the term is non-existent, is incredible.
U. S. News & World Report recently described the prices charged for representative commodities in Warsaw, where communism reigns supreme. In terms of U. S. money, shoes are priced at $231.25 a pair; a girl's sweater costs $187; bathing trunks carry an $85 price tag; an ordinary brief case commands $200. The cheap-
Strange Attitude
No country can free or half communistious; one must
In every country regardless of what been one of the first
No one who knew these facts. So a convention of the
The contrast with stores in communist countries, where the government owns or bosses everything and competition in our sense of the term is non-existent, is incredible.
U. S. News & World Report recently described the prices charged for representative commodities in Warsaw, where communism reigns supreme. In terms of U. S. money, shoes are priced at $231.25 a pair; a girl's sweater costs $187; bathing trunks carry an $85 price tag; an ordinary brief case commands $200. The cheapest brandy costs $48 a bottle, horse meat retails at $1.50 a pound and beef is $3 to $5 a pound.
Some skilled workers in Poland get good wages—a tractor driver can earn as much as $400 a month. But it would take all his wages for about two weeks to buy a pair of shoes.
Next time you hear someone extolling the virtues of big, all-powerful government at the expense of free enterprise, remember these figures.
"The Answer Is Apparent"
It has been argued that this country should, in effect, scuttle its Merchant Marine and ship only in foreign vessels, in order that the foreign nations involved may increase their U. S. dollar revenues and thus become able to buy more goods from us.
No one doubts that the principle economic problem faced by many friendly foreign powers is how to strengthen their dollar balances. But abandonment of an American Merchant Marine would be about as dangerous a way to attack this problem as anyone can imagine. The Committee of American Shipping Lines Essential Foreign Trade Routes has pointed to two of the grave fallacies implicit in the proposal. First, we simply cannot afford to depend upon foreign nations for transporting our exports and imports. We might once again, as in 1917 and 1941, find ourselves without the ships needed to carry on our world commerce and to serve our overseas troop installations.
Second, even if foreign nations carried all U. S. ocean commerce the increase in the net earnings of their steamship companies would be but a fraction of one percent of their national incomes. As the Committee states, "Balance such fractional gains to them against the important advantages to this country and the free world of a strong U. S. Merchant Marine and the answer is apparent."
In the interest of American commerce and American defense alike, we must have a strong and active merchant fleet.
Communist Aim
You, the college student, whether or not you realize it, are the rich earth which the Communist conspirator
Balance such fractional gains to them against the important advantages to this country and the free world of a strong U. S. Merchant Marine and the answer is apparent."
In the Interest of American commerce and American defense alike, we must have a strong and active merchant fleet.
Communist Aim
You, the college student, whether or not you realize it, are the rich earth which the Communist conspirator hopes to till. Your mind is the soil in which he hopes to implant alien seed... The Communist seeks to rob you of your birthright by destroying your faith in our republic. The mess of pottage which he offers in tempting the weak, the shallow, and the short-sighted, is the illusory promise of material security—the security of the slave... Communism lives on lies. It corrodes honor, destroys integrity, and subverts all the qualities which combine in an individual to make him, in the truest sense, a man. Wherever there is an honest man, there is an island of strength. Live honorably. (J. Edgar Hoover).
SONGS OF A SONNETEER
BY R. LOUG SCOTT
"FLANNERY'S WAKE!"
Here now we kneel to keen this sinner's wake—Who yesterday was eager to be kissed: We pour libation—and obeisance make—Not to dead clay nor that departed mistWhich spurred it onward! Nay, we quaff this toastTo the laughing lad who could not resistEither bottle or maid: who spake proud boastThat not one nor 'tother should be denied—Till he had become a phantasmal ghost!
Sure, his kin-folk groaned and his widow cried;While hired mourners keened for his soul's sad sake;But you and I, kneeling here by his side—Smile a bit to think of him on the makeIn Hades or Heaven—after the wake!
OUR TRUST'S IN HIM
Othman's Views on Washington
BY FREDERICK C. OTHMAN
WASHINGTON — On the day after Labor Day, meaning tomorrow, the summer season is over for politicians on their plazas and things begin to boom in the marble halls.
Only I haven't heard a peep from anybody lately about Congress coming back this fall. President Eisenhower has decided he has enough money for the government to squeak by, after all, and he's staying in Colorado until the 20th of this month.
There have been some snide remarks about the streams out there being stocked with large rainbow trout in the dark of the night before the Presidential line is cast each morning, but my man at the Fisheries Bureau assures me these are canards. Probably being spread by Democrats.
We've got Senators and Congressmen scattered from Korea to Denmark, investigating things. Mostly they are pursuing their inquiries in localities where it happens to be cool, but this of course, is mere coincidence. February is the time to investigate stuff in the tropics. Always has been and who am I to argue?
Sen. Joe McCarthy (R., Wis.), the only lawgiver diligently on the job investigating skulluggeries, Communist and otherwise, has been ranging from one end of the land to the other lately, but he says he will open shop here shortly with more sensations under the candellers of the Caucus Room.
It has been so dry lately that the leaves are falling off the trees all over town and the White House gardening department is oiling up its automatic leaf chopper-upper. It works on the lawn like a vacuum cleaner.
There has been a good deal of moving of heavy furniture in the Pentagon, with a number of admirals and generals being eased out of their river-view suites to make way for the new civilian This, however, is hearing not been invited for a while.
Our town still is well by economists, some of jobs since the heavy industrial employment, but get any good Labor Department out of those bad predictions, but they cancel each time.
Some say the boom will booming through next year say it's going to slide and the rest fear a recall can take your choice on numerous items, from sets to iceboxes, boosted a little.
My own private business department turns out industry this fall sell electric blankets and fore. These are fine that the makers have re-bussing and clicking in I recommend them.
It pleases me also to the Benjamin Electric Mining Co., of Des Plains producing for daylight cally heated socks at pair. The heating sleek knit into the socks; then nected by wires running pants legs to batteries your belt.
The first of this series are coming in quartal capital, but I haven't nerve to try them yet. Hot. The local oysters anyhow. They come in different varieties, which like Millard Tydings be identified by their flap I'm still a boy from the West; they all taste like me.
That leaves us finally cocktail party problem, ing its dark-brown, autumn of us with zinc-achs can consider this tomorrow. The fluids in of the houseware...
Strange Attitude
No country can long exist half socialist and half free or half communist and half free. One must be victorious; one must be defeated and destroyed.
In every country which has adopted dictatorship, regardless of what it calls itself, organized labor has been one of the first victims.
No one who knows anything of history can doubt these facts. So a resolution adopted at the last annual convention of the CIO seems strange indeed: "The CIO reaffirms its support for a national health program which will provide the people of our nation with needed medical services, facilities and personnel. Such a program must include expanded federal aid... It must also include a system of national health insurance."
This resolution calls for a degree of political domination of medicine which could result only in socialized medicine. And socialized medicine, as history attests, is one of the main planks in the general socialist program. Do the CIO policy makers honestly believe that we can socialize and regiment certain professions and certain enterprises—and leave other groups, including labor, free and independent?
The CIO wants improved medical care. So does everyone else. And we are getting better care—in a sound, and orderly manner. We are gradually solving the problems involved. No major nation can point to greater progress than ours. To make the medical arts the instrument of government would be to turn the clock back, and to set in motion a chain of the most ominous and far-reaching consequences.
Just Imagine
To say that we Americans have unrivalled living standards is simply to repeat something that has been said countless times. And the reason for this repetition is that it is true. The retail store is the show window of our abundance. In a little town or a vast metropolis, these stores offer an almost bewilderingly varied selection of goods, at prices which, measured in the light of the average family's income, are reasonable.
Contrast this with conditions in Russia, the home of communism—the system which claims to free the masses of men and women from capitalist exploitation and bring them the resulting material benefits.
E. Gordon Fox, an engineer who has lived in Russia, recently said: "Imagine a shortage of everything except perfume; imagine spending hours standing in queues to make ordinary purchases; imagine milk dished out in open cans on street corners; imagine an absence of screens and the presence of more flies than there are dollars in our national debt; imagine working a month for the wherewithal to buy a shoddy suit of clothes."
Just try to imagine these conditions next time.
Your Birthday Forecast
(BY STELLA)
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 7 — Born today, you are one of those who tend to combine facts and fancy in such equal quantities that it is sometimes difficult to know where the dividing line may be. You have an exceptionally vivid imagination and should really put it to use in the creative arts. You have the gift of the written word and some kind of popular literature would probably prove to be a fine life career for you.
You have a magnetic personality and will make friends wherever you go. You have a fine sense of loyalty and expect all those with whom you come in contact to obey the same rigid laws. When they don't, you suffer very definite dislusionment. It is at such times that you must guard against becoming cynical and withdrawing into a self-made ivory tower where you can dream happily and quite undisturbed by the harsh realities of everyday life.
Your intuitions are keen and it is also likely that you have psychic powers. If you put these to good use, you may become outstanding. But you could utilize them commercially to your own dismerit. You are, at times a consumate optimist—when things are going along according to plan, but at other times, you are depressed beyond the average. You should learn to control your mood or they can bring a lack of harmony into your life.
Exert great caution in marriage, for unless you select someone with similar cultural tastes and a temperament which fits in with your own, there can be a lot of misunderstanding and ultimate unhappiness in store for you.
To find what the stars have in store for tomorrow, select your birthday star and read the corresponding paragraph. Let your birthday star be your daily guide.
Tuesday, September 8
VIRGO (Aug. 22-Sept. 23) — Pay very close attention to the eminently practical side of life, just as he will open shop here shortly with more sensations under the candelers of the Gaucus Room.
It has been so dry lately that the leaves are falling off the trees all over town and the White House gardening department is rolling up its automatic leaf chopper-upper. It works on the lawn like a vacuum cleaner.
There has been a good deal of moving of heavy furniture in the Pentagon, with a number of admirals and generals being eased out of their river-view suites to make way for the new civilian aides of Secretary Charlie Wilson. The latter, I understand, now is riding in an air-conditioned sedan from the auto plant he used to run.
Cancer (June 22-July 21) — Opportunity day! If you smart enough to recycle, put a new idea into office LEO (July 24-Aug. 23) — a chance to advance, to date of time to investigate the tests before going out on (Distributed by United Syndicate, Inc.).
Hollywood
By ALINE MOSE
HOLLYWOOD (UP) — Day five warring couples'lywood are laboring at make-up—even bombastic Winters announced today ports she was parting froe Gassman were "shoe Cupid is coming out to movetown for a change" ebrites singing re tunes to their parted Shelley; for one, has "star" of gossip column insist the Gassman man run out of gas.
The blonde charmer handsome Italian actor linger together ony a few months their highly-publicized trip to courtship and marriage 1952. Filmville has chatter reports that the senator man quarreled with Elie her colorful antics. Gassquent movie location tripa articles in Italy add the gossip fire.
Just Nonesmile
and bring them the resulting material benefits.
E. Gordon Fox, an engineer who has lived in Russia, recently said: "Imagine a shortage of everything except perfume; imagine spending hours standing in queues to make ordinary purchases; imagine milk dish-ed out in open cans on street corners; imagine an absence of screens and the presence of more flies than there are dollars in our national debt; imagine working a month for the wherewithal to buy a shoddy suit of clothes."
Just try to imagine these conditions next time you go shopping. Then decide what you think of free, competitive enterprise and the system which makes it and all other freedoms possible.
STRANGE AS IT SEEMS
COMIC BEN BLUE GAVE 27 COMMAND PERFORMANCES BEFORE MEMBERS OF THE BRITISH ROYAL FAMILY USING HIS NOVELTY SKATING BUT—NO SKATES, NO ICE!
FAIRY FLIES BUILT ON A MINIATURE SCALE AND PERFECT IN ALL THEIR PARKS, MEASURE ONLY 1/100 OF AN INCH FROM HEAD TO TAIL
MR. AND MRS. RARE BUTTONS—HANDMADE BY MRS. NETTE TUCKER, THE DOLLS ARE PART OF THE COLLECTION OF THE TUCKER MUSEUM, Bevermont, Calif.
FIVE YEARS WERE SPENT COLLECTING THE 15,000 RARE BUTTONS USED AND ALL WERE SEWED ON BY HAND!
RADIO KVOE(1480)
MONDAY
6:00 Bobby Senson
5:30 Wonderful City
5:55 Cecil Brown
6:00 Gabriel Heatter
6:15 Orange Empire Reporter
6:30 Sports Report
6:55 Earn Hayes
6:55 Bill Hanry
7:00 The Falcon
7:20 Hall of Fantasy
7:40 Let George Do It
7:60 Glenn Hardy News
7:80 Fulton Lewis
8:10 Town House Time
8:35 Titus Moody
10:00 Conrad
10:05 Club Gardens
10:30 Eddie Fisher
10:45 Disc N Chat
TUESDAY
8:00 Mexican Hour
7:00 News
7:45 Breakfast Gang
7:45 Breakfast Gang
Orange Empire Reporter
Exert great caution in marriage, for unless you select someone with similar cultural tastes and a temperament which fits in with your own, there can be a lot of misunderstanding and ultimate unhappiness in store for you.
To find what the stars have in store for tomorrow, select your birthday star and read the corresponding paragraph. Let your birthday star be your daily guide.
Tuesday, September 8
VIRGO (Aug. 22-Sept. 23)—Pay very close attention to the eminently practical side of life, just now. Make your plans work.
LIBRA (Sept. 24-Oct. 23)—It may be your lot to help out someone who is very much discouraged about life. Be merry and gay.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)—There are certain good aspects that can be very helpful if you will take full advantage of them now.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 22)—Doing your daily good deed can bring happiness to yourself as well as to others whom you help!
CAPRICORN (Dec. 23-Jan. 20)—Do not permit outside influence to distract you from your set program of work. Business and pleasure don't mix.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 21-Feb. 19)—This is one of those fine days when you can show the world what you can do. Actions shout out loud!
PISCES (Feb. 20-Mar. 20)—Don't waste time over errors that others make. Be sure that your own work is without any mistakes, first.
ARIES (Mar. 21-Apr. 20)—Work is
But the round-faced sister "this is nonsense." I've just had a wound with my husband," she telephone from Banff, where she's working in "Saskatchewan."
After the visit, Gassman fly to Venice, Italy, where later company is staging for the Venice Film Festival.
"He'll be back in Holten ten days, and so will I added.
More Patches.
Other couples showed trying to patch up their Beauteous Eleanor Park sworn to friends she'd turn to producer Bert They were separated last But when Friedlob was
Washington Scenes
BCK C. OTHMAN
This, however, is hearsay; I haven’t been invited for a ride.
Our town still is well-populated by economists, some of whom are jobless since the heavy cuts in Federal employment, but you can’t get any good Labor Day predictions out of those babies. They make the predictions, all right, but they cancel each other out.
Some say the boom will continue booming through next year, others say it’s going to slide a little, and the rest fear a recession. You can take your choice, but prices on numerous items, from television sets to iceboxes, are being boosted a little.
My own private business scooting department turns up the fact that industry this fall will try to sell electric blanks as never before. These are fine items, now that the makers have removed the bussing and clicking noises, and I recommend them.
It pleases me also to report that the Benjamin Electric Manufacturing Co., of Des Plaines, Ill., is producing for daylight use electrically heated socks at $19.95 per pair. The heating elements are knitted into the socks; they are connected by wires running up your pants legs to batteries hooked to your belt.
The first of this season’s oysters are coming in quantity to the capital, but I haven’t raised the nerve to try them yet. Been too hot. The local oysters awe me, anyhow. They come in a dozen different varieties, which fanciers like Millard Tydings claim can be identified by their flavors. Guess I’m still a boy from the Middle West; they all taste like oysters to me.
That leaves us finally with the cocktail party problem, now rearing its dark-brown, autumn head; those of us with zinc-lined stomachs can consider this one here tomorrow. The fluids in the glasses of the hospital last week with bleeding ulcers, his estranged wife sped, sobbing, to his side.
Ida Lupino and Howard Duff kissed and made up after a brief separation. Mona Freeman has been quietly dating auto dealer Pat Nerney—although she divorced him nearly a year ago. Once she even walked out in the middle of a date with hotel heir Nicky Hilton and telephoned Nerney to take her home.
Susan Hayward won’t talk, but her friends say her estranged husband, actor Jess Barker, has been trying to patch their marriage up. He’s told pals he’ll even get out of show business if she’ll try holding hands over a breakfast table again.
RADIO and TELEVISION
MONDAY P. M.
8:00 P.M.
KLAO-News, Sports, Alex Cooper
KFL-Pat Bishop
KPO-News, Sports
KCA-Kroy Birch
KFL-Bar-B
KPB-Bill Rowe
KPB-Mc Rumor
KFA-Sunset Serenade
KFL-News
KPO-Bill Stewart
KCA-Virgin Pinkley
KFL-Tom Harmon
KPO-Music
KLAO-News, L.A.
KFL-Voice of Firestone
KCA-Chet Runnier
KPA-Woodside City
KNA-World Today
KPE-Frank Goe
KLAO-Sam Batter
KPO-Bill Stewart
KBO-Bob Garred
6:00 P.M.
KLAO-News
KFL-George Putnam
KPO-Sports
KLAO-Len Beardsley
KFL-Gebriel Hester
KFB-Wed. Red Rows
KFX-Radio Theater
KFA-News, Showtime
KLAO-Bob McLaughlin
KFL-Ou of West
KPO-KJI-News
KECA-Elmer Davis
KFB-Sports
KHJ-Perry Come
KFI-Amel Way
KPO-Race Topics
KECA-Drmer Music
KNX-AFL G. Meany
KNX-Evening Concert
KNX-Newareel
KNX-Johnny Mercer
KNX-KFI Calling
KNPC-Dance Time
KNX-Philip Norman
KNX-Could This Be You
KNX-Hawthorne
10:00 P.M.
KLAO-G. Norman
KNX-KNX-KJI-News
KECA-News, E.G. Hill
KEA-Lewis Jr.
KFA-Crossroads
KNX-Larry Finley
10:18
KNX-Joy Power
KEA-Da. Bailes
KNX-Frank Edwards
KNX-Kennelly, Harmon
KNX-Lemoneal Gal
KNX-Repeats Performance
KNX-Dance Time
KNX-Crowell Nest
KNX-Philip Norman
11:00 P.M.
KNX-News, G. Norman
KNX-KNX-KJI-News
KNPC-Dance Time
KECA-My Own Place
KNX-Let Goons Do It
KNX-Music Man
KNX-Evening Concert
KNLC-Gene Norman
KNCA-Geo Harrison
KNX-Music #4
KNX-KMCP-Music #8
BN-Hour
BN-Gwil Thomas
BN-Under Airport
KECA-Symphony #85
KNPC-Rami-Cardinals
KNPC-Family Stleton
12 MIDNIGHT
KNLC-Midnight Flyer
KNPC-Bill Stewart
KECA-News, Music
KBW-Larry Finley
KBX-News, Record
DIAL-LITES — TONIGHT — TELE-TIPS
7:00-KHJ-The Falcon
7:30-KNX-Talent Scouts
8:00-KECA-Guy Lombarde
8:30-KEAC-Drmer Music
Day Forecast
TELLA)
what really counts, just now. Cut down on the wishful thinking and get busy! Success can be yours. down on the wishful thinking and get busy! Success can be yours.
TAURUS (Apr. 21-May 21)—Don’t be discouraged at a minor upset today. You can make up for lost time in the very near future.
GEMINI (May 22-June 21)—You can advance your success potential by proving you are good! A job well done today proves rewarding.
CANCER (June 22-July 23)—A real "opportunity day" if you are only smart enough to recognize it! Put a new idea into operation.
LEO (July 24-Aug. 23)—If you see a chance to advance, take plenty of time to investigate the full details before going out on a limb.
(Distributed by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.)
Hollywood
By ALINE MOSBY
HOLLYWOOD (UP)—This Labor Day five warring couples in Hollywood are laboring at kiss-and-make-up—even bombastic Shelley Winters announced today that reports she was parting from Vittorio Gassman were "sheer bunk."
Cupid is coming out on top in movietown for a change, with celebrities singing reconciliation tunes to their parted mates.
Shelley for one, has been the "star" of gossip column items that insist the Gassman marriage has run out of gas.
The blonde charmer and the handsome Italian actor have lived together ony a few months since their highly-publicized transatlantic courtship and marriage in April, 1952. Filmville has chattered with reports that the sensitive Gassman quarreled with Shelly over her colorful antics. Gassman's frequent movie location trips and theatrical tours in Italy added fuel to the gossip fire.
DIAL-LITES — TONIGHT — TELE-TIPS
7:00 A.M.
KLAG News, Haynes
KLAG-KXK News
KOA-Paul Masterson
KWB-Bill Leyden
KLJ-P. Hemingway
KWB-Cooper
KCL-Let the Chips Fall
KIG-Barrybird
KFI-News
KFO-News
KFI-Breakfast Gang
KFI-Book Story
KXK-Frank Goose
KXL-Cabbages & Kings
KBW-Roberta Leyden
KBW-Chock Watcher
KECA-Bob Garred
KXL-Harry Babbitts
KXL-Knoor Manning
KXL-News, J. Freed
8:00 A.M.
KLAG-News, Sports
KLJ-Juney Harry
KXA-Breakfast Club
KXL-Ed Petitt
KXL-Ralph Story
KXF-Stover
KLJ-KXK-News
KLG-Balter, Haynes
KGPO-Markets, Sports
KBW-Bill Leyden
KXF-Pat Bishop
KGPO-Make Up Your Mind
KGPO-Glock Watcher
KGJ-Ervery of Reest
KWB-News
KIY-Andy de Virginia
KIY-Rosemary
KIY-Footy
8:00 A.M.
KLAG-News, Haynes
KLG-Gardens
KBW-Bill Leyden
KBX-Wandy Warren
KBX-Chas, Antell
KBWE-Bill Stewart
KAF-Piano Parade
KXL-Aunt Jenny
KAF-Ladies Day
KAF-Commentary
KECA-Cheetah Hunting
KAF-Music
KAF-Peter Potter
KAF-Ladies Day
KAF-Chef Milani
KAF-Norma Young
KAF-Dble, or Nothing
KBW-Ellis James
KBW-Elen Drent
KAF-News
KNX-Gal Sunday
TUESDAY A.M.
7:00 A.M.
KLAG News, Haynes
KXL-Garden,
KBW-Bill Leyden
KBX-Wandy Warren
KBX-Chas, Antell
KBWE-Bill Stewart
KAF-Piano Parade
KAF-Music
KAF-Peter Potter
KAF-Ladies Day
KAF-Chef Milani
KAF-Norma Young
KAF-Dble, or Nothing
KBW-Ellis James
KBW-Elen Drent
KAF-Music
KAF-Peter Potter
KAF-Ladies Day
KAF-Chef Milani
KAF-Norma Young
KAF-Dble, or Nothing
KBW-Ellis James
KBW-Elen Drent
KAF-Music
KAF-Peter Potter
KAF-Ladies Day
KAF-Chef Milani
KAF-Norma Young
KAF-Dble, or Nothing
KBW-Ellis James
KBW-Elen Drent
KAF-Music
KAF-Peter Potter
KAF-Ladies Day
KAF-Chef Milani
KAF-Norma Young
КАF-Dble, or Nothing
KBW-Ellis James
KBW-Elen Drent
KAF-Music
KAF-Peter Potter
KAF-Ladies Day
КАF-Chef Milani
КАF-Norma Young
КАF-Dble, or Nothing
KBW-Ellis James
KBW-Elen Drent
KAF-Music
KAF-Peter Potter
КАF-Ladies Day
КАF-Chef Milani
КАF-Norma Young
КАF-Dble, or Nothing
KBW-Ellis James
KBW-Elen Drent
KAF-Music
KAF-Peter Potter
КАF-Ladies Day
КАF-Chef Milani
КАF-Norma Young
КАF-Dble, or Nothing
KBW-Ellis James
KBW-Elen Drent
KAF-Music
KAF-Peter Potter
КАF-Ladies Day...
КАF-Chef Milani...
КАF-Norma Young...
КАF-Dble, or Nothing
KBW-Ellis James...
KBW-Elen Drent
KAF-Music...
КАF-Peter Potter...
КАF-Ladies Day...
КАF-Chef Milani...
КАF-Norma Young...
КАF-Dble, or Nothing
KBW-Ellis James...
KBW-Elen Drent
KAF-Music...
КАF-Peter Potter...
КАF-Ladies Day...
КАF-Chef Milani...
КАF-Norma Young...
КАF-Dble, or Nothing
KBW-Ellis James...
KBW-Elen Drent
KAF-Music...
КАF-Peter Potter...
КАF-Ladies Day...
КАF-Chef Milani...
КАF-Norma Young...
КА F-Dblense....
TELEVISION Monday, Sept. 7
5:00 P.M.
6:00 P.M.
7:00 P.M.
8:00 P.M.
9:00 P.M.
10:00 P.M.
11:00 P.M.
12:00 P.M.
13:00 P.M.
14:00 P.M.
15:00 P.M.
16:00 P.M.
17:00 P.M.
18:00 P.M.
19:00 P.M.
20:00 P.M.
21:00 P.M.
22:00 P.M.
23:00 P.M.
24:00 P.M.
25:00 P.M.
26:00 P.M.
27:00 P.M.
28:00 P.M.
29:00 P.M.
30:00 P.M.
31:00 P.M.
32:00 P.M.
33:00 P.M.
34:00 P.M.
35:00 P.M.
36:00 P.M.
37:00 P.M.
38:00 P.M.
39:00 P.M.
40:00 P.M.
41:00 P.M.
42:00 P.M.
43:00 P.M.
44:00 P.M.
45:00 P.M.
46:00 P.M.
47:00 P.M.
48:00 P.M.
49:00 P.M.
50:00 P.M.
51:00 P.M.
52:00 P.M.
53:00 P.M.
54:00 P.M.
55:00 P.M.
56:00 P.M.
57:00 P.M.
58:00 P.M.
59:00 P.M.
60:00 P.M.
61:00 P.M.
62:00 P.M..
63:00 P.M..
64:00 P.M..
65:00 P.M..
66:00 P.M..
67:00 P.M..
68:00 P.M..
69:00 P.M..
70:00 P.M..
71:00 P.M..
72:00 P.M..
73:00 P.M..
74:
"star" of gossip column items that insist the Gassman marriage has run out of gas.
The blonde charmer and the handsome Italian actor have lived together a few months since their highly-publicized transatlantic courtship and marriage in April, 1952. Filmville has chattered with reports that the sensitive Gassman quarreled with Shelly over her colorful antics. Gassman's frequent movie location trips and theatrical tours in Italy added fuel to the gossip fire.
Just Nonsense
But the round-faced actress insisted "this is nonsense."
"I've just had a wonderful visit with my husband," she said via telephone from Banff, Canada, where she's working in a movie, "Saskatchewan."
"He came up here for my birthday and spent five days. He gave me a gold, diamond and sapphire wedding ring as a birthday gift. Whoever is circulating those rumors—well, it's a bad joke."
After the visit, Gassman had to fly to Venice, Italy, where his theater company is staging a play for the Venice Film Festival.
"He'll be back in Hollywood in ten days, and so will I," Shelly added.
More Patches
Other couples showed signs of trying to patch up their troubles.
Beauteous Eleanor Parker had sworn to friends she'd never return to producer Bert Friedlob. They were separated last June. But when Friedlob was rushed to