opty eee eee tane » ‘ 7 or % West terners head east in summer ‘ gold rush’ By BOB THOMAS .. HOLLYWOOD (AP)—The gold rush f is on, with TV's gunslingers heeding: wianl? This is the season for the west- ern stars to fill their pouches with loot from ‘the hinterlands, They: are heading: east not by pony but by jet, to display them- selves before. admiring : throngs , at. fairs, rodeos. and whatever. They sing a little, ride a little, tell jokes, twirl their six- -shooters, (Smule and sign autographs. BIG MONEY INVOLVED “Figures: released by..the New. Mexico” State Fair ..Commission give: evidence- of the money. to be: had. Gene’ ‘Barry (Bat Mas- terson) has ‘been’ set for two ap- -pedirances in’one day at the Sep- tember fair for $2,000; Dale Rob- ,ertson (Wells. Fargo) for six ap- -pearances in three days ‘at $7,500. The, “Gunsmoke” trio—Dennis , Weaver,’ Amanda Blake, Milburn , Stoné—will come ‘in for “six: ap- vpearances at $8,500.- “Robert” Horton | (Wagon Train) is: making hay this summer with such ‘dates as the’ Cincinnati .ro- aa and Tulsa horse show, as well ville, Kan., the ery, “go: east; young as playing “Picnic” in Detroit: and “Guys. and: Dolls” in War- ren, Ohio; Chick Connors and young Johnny. Crawford ° (the Rifleman) were.'booked for the St. Louis police cireus and Oma- ha rodeo.. re Robert Culp ‘(‘Trackdown) ex- pects to earn $70, 000 this year from ~ personals, ‘probably as much as he gets from the series. - Among his dates Lincoln, Neb., centennial, Salina and Coffey- rodeos. Jack Kelly (Maverick) just returned from the Washington, D.C. home show, and Hugh O’Brian has gone from a Winnipeg rodeo to playing “The Rainmaker” dn Chicago. MAY TRAIN STARS - , . Many of these appearances are booked by Mary Markham, who calls -herself.a star producer. -“We don’ tt send stars out to say merely, ‘hello,: ‘folks, I’m glad to . be here,’ ” ‘she. ‘remarked, “They all. do something. If they don’t shave talent: - "as “performers, we give it to. them.’ ™ “one of the fine bre ‘eWS ao LONG, (COOL HITS THE BS ae ‘vz B. C. REALLY THE CARLING BREWERIES (B.C) LTD. @ You have only to try U.B.C, Rohemtan 19 know why this flavorful heer has so many frionds, Tonight, pour a U.B.C, Bohomian Sor yoursall, for your friends, { You'll be joining an ever-growing elrele of heer fanclars who prefer no other beer } -CARLING'S/BC QC CARLING BREWERINS (2.0.) LIMITRD eformerty Vancouver Breweries Ltd.) oy | for free home delivery phone 409d Tie advertigament 1s not published or displayod by the Liquor Control hoard of by the Govornmont of Britlsh Columbia, ‘i .|eoffee house? ‘ing are pulling in tourist and months. The beatniks, natch, are backing them, ° ~ | Says Dick Woods, a coffee- ja bombing raid on Naples, Italy. J returning from the boniblng mia- ‘Jalon whan {ft lost radio contact] Philadelphians” . finds |Paul. Newman in:a- clinch with - Helen Jay. In this movie based’ on a: novel, by William. Powell, ‘Newman ‘stars as a law student and” lawyer. . It ‘is: his first Straight, business-suit. role. ° , a Bea tnik ‘poe seiry. readings prompt action 5 y police NEW’ YORK (#—The embat- { tled beatniks of Greenwich Vil- lage want to co-exist, like, but the fuzz doesn’t dig them and gs trying to down them. Translated, this means the bearded young men who read their poetry in Greenwich Vil- lage coffee houses are having their troubles with the police department. The difficulty: Is it art or is it entertainment when a beat- nik reads his poetry aloud in a To the police department, 16 is legal to provide entertain- ment without a cabaret licence. i So the department is continuing to. issue summonses to coffee houses in which regular -poetry readings are held without cab- -aret lcences. . The proprietors of several coffee houses where poetry read- natives have protested in recent house poet from Shreveport, La.: “These ‘summonses are strictly a bum rap. People come to the Village expecting something like these . poetry readings. They come to enjoy them. Without them, the Village would be as dead as any other part. of town.” Desert ONE IN’) A.MAZE ‘of roinantic ent ngleni ents ‘in “THe Young é LON DON OA British -art sance of the. arts” now is in full swing {n Quebec, “We register with pleasure the ‘fact that in‘the Laurentian re- gion the pendulum has swung away from unimaginative -real- ism to a. modernism that dares to rearrange or even. ‘distort’ for the, sake of creative, design what nature reveals to*the eye," says the current issue of the Art News and Review. , “And we . place much hope in Montreal... . with its Latin warnith and sparkle and wicked - ness where thére are. more churches . and girlie shows per which may ‘yét surprise the world with a Montpar nasse equal, or almost equal, |douce. France.” TORONTO IS: COMMERCIAL The bi-weekly - joutnal - Quebec art is scarcely.. two dec- ades old. Before the 1930s, “com- mercial Toronto—as prosaic a the unchallenged centre and capital of Canadian art.” “This explains to a ‘degree why this recent newcomer to- world art is comparitively little known in the US... . who visit. Quebec during the summer hardly ever bother: to find out what the Canadians have to offer in addition to re- ligious shrines and... delightful panoramas.” | 7 + casts up mystery WASHINGTON (#)—The Sahara ‘Desert has cast up a mystery as deep and baffling as any record- ed in the annals of the sea. A B-24 bomber which had a crew of nine has been found in the waterless waste of Libya, 380 NINE miles south of Bengazi. It was last seen 16 years ago when it took off from a Libyan base for The bomber lies there on the sand, preserved almost perfectly in the desert alr. Although its ' fuselage was snapped in two at the tall, the plane appears un- damaged otherwise. Its radio stil! is In working order. NO TRACE OF MEN There is not a trace of the men ‘who flew off on that wartime mission in 1048, No clothing, no written records, FULL WATER BOTTLES Water bottles, presumably tightly capped, were found still Med in the cabin of the plane. Had the crew crash-landed and started to walk out to alylllaa- tion, they would have taken all available water with thom, If they had heen killed In the land- Ing, which caused so Uttle dam- age to the plane, tholrerenajns @ 00 @.@: 0.0. O22. RARRRARI FILARIASIS) ne On a ee ee would be there, * WHY NO SURVIVORS . Did the crew all bail ‘out some- whore else, as the defence da- partment thinks js Nkely? Then how did tha plane fly on for lumdreds of miles to let down In a doft landing jn the desert? And why, apparently, did nona of the crew sirvive, Ruford wi. Moore of. Parta~ mouth, Ohlo, father of one of tha evyow mombers, said he received i. lottor In 1046 from the war de- partment, saying the plane was and edge angle, with its base and was presumed down Jn the Mediterranean, Tho defence department idan. tifled the plane from ita seria) nunhers, Despite passage af tine relatives of all nine erow mom- ae " hers were yrouched whon the names wore relonsed friday night, Hore it is... the grentest advanco in shaving comfort since the in- vention of the safety razor, Tt's the Gillette Adjustable! dust. turn the micrometer dial, different, degrees of edge exposure Light board?,.. Honvy heard? ..« There's n soting hat delivers you comfort-thatva all but unbelievable, FATHER'S DAY GIFT CARTONS OF You get 0 journal ‘says a “veritable renais- city block -than in Paris and. to that of Ja" city as Montreal: is poetic—was |’ “Even the tens of thousands SHAVIN And, change the sotting if you like while shaving sonsitive or hard- Lo-shavo spots, The: publication attributes re- eént artistic achievements to Quebec’s social and political de- velopment coupled with an in- fusion. of French “refugee in- tellectuals” after the outbreak of the Second World War, ~“By. 1939 Quebec was no longer Cinderella: to British North Am- erica, no longer wide open spaces punctuated ‘with. a few ‘back- ‘ward towns, no longer ruled dic- tatorially ‘by an unholy alliance between a reactionary clergy and a near-fascist, irredéentist. of- ficialdom united in an impotent opposition to the red} rulers of Frénch Canada—the British -banks in’ London and Toronto. . ENERGIES RE- CHANNELLED “The Vast: energy “thab had long been wasted, on fighting .the English and their language now said. |'¥2S;, With the threat of ethnic disappearance. removed, used to- wards developing: the .cultural heritage. of the group.” The journal said that sculp- ture in Quebec, unlike’ painting which. shows considerable prom- ise, still lage far behind that of the United States, England or France. : “The pompous war memorials, statues of national heroes and decorations of banks and rail- way stations abound - in 18th century frills and 19th century frock coats. ‘“To find sculpture that is not a fifth-rate imitation of classic Greek one must go lo the Littte villages .where simple, and sincerity.” scour UNIFORM « STEVENAGE, England @) — Boy Scouts have’ been told it is not proper to wear jeans in- stead of khaki shorts “Uniforms are to be worn in’ accordance with regulations,” says the dis- trict commissioner of this Hert- fordshire town. ; 4 Prince Rupert Daily News Tuesday, June 9, 1959 ¢RED E. ‘poworr OPTOM ETR IST Phone 5548 303 - 3rd Ave. Ww. religious, souls but not lacking’ acumen, carve figures of saints that-have |: an inimitable charm of warmth, NEAL EVANS, MOVING PACKING — STORAGE SHIPPING Local and Long Distance Moving. 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