Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 3, 1950)
4 The News-Review, Roieburg, Ort. Thuri., Aug, 3, 1950 Hollywood Scene By ERSKINE JOHNSON HOLLYWOOD, (NEA) Behind the Screen: Love-making, 1925 style is back and Hollywood's got it along with television. Producer Edward Small is still denying that Eleanor Parker plays GYPPO LOGGERS Wt hav a lorge si Itcrion of good used fire tools of bar gain prices. Hazel Hoes Brush Hooks Mattocks Picks Axes DOYLE'S Sales & Service Highway 99 at Garden Valley Phone 611 silent film aueen Acnes Ayres In l "Valentino," but in one of the pic- : tuie s biii sequences there s a love scene between Eleanor and Tony ; Dexter, as the Oomph Boy, in a sheik's tent. Richard Carlson plays a pioneer movie director. "It's love-making in the 1925 style," Carlson told me, "and 1 keep yelling instructions at them and hamming it up." The Valentiao set is closed light er than Ft. Knox, with even the press barred. It's Carlson's idea that Producer Small has closed the set to help Dexter, a ringer for Valentino, fill the toughest assign ment in screen history. He says: "It's incredible to watch Dexter. He has to be accepted by every I Valentino fan and I believe he will be." The romance between Ted Bris i kin, Betty Hutton's ex, and Fran Keegan of "Gentlemen Prefer Blondes" is hotter than the weath er .. . Jean Hersholt says "D r. Christian" will be on TV within two years. There's also a video series on the griddle for Van Heflin. CBS WANTS HIM TO PLAY A TOUGH EDITOR OF A METROPOLITAN j PAPER FOR A WEEKLY SH.OW Mickey Rooncy is wearing a wor I ried look. His wife, Martha Vick I crs, is under doctor's care for an i internal ailment. M BOMB MAKES HIT Mac Murray's comeback in a dance act at the Macambo last month, has brought her offers of 1U .fV. J) A wonderful Mid-summer-MAIN DISH" DELICIOUS! EASY TO MAKE I ECONOMICAL! : Try it TONIGHT! 1 lobL.po.r, burnt I 'obUipoon flour M l.oip.on toll "j?" '"'""It Milk, d.lul.d ,,,, ;,,, n.d,um h S,lrill ' bl.ndMfvu, .r..o,.Adllt,mtini 'nd """ ' h, ,n,tin. Z J0""' Add "'"nd,., iol. 5erv 4 to 6, niCFN LA I EL ADOID Alio Solid Peck W.mork .1 Von Como S.o food Co. Inc.. t.-mlnol Ulond. Coll. p,p ipdwllj in - I. 'y T ''IT' '-Vr-'". ' '- I 1 I Road To Riches Begins With Debt, Tycoon Says . 'atv A ;-, --if. I 1 Al' THE JUNIORS CO TO SEA Southern Cali fornia Junior yachtsmen practice for the 15th annual "FlUht of the Snowbirds," their own retatla in Greater Newport Harbor, Cal. tours to England and Australia, plus a U. S. night club tour. She says: "There are so many offers 1 think, 'What is this! I guess I'm just the M-Bomb.' " Bud Abbott made a sentimental journey to the engine room of the Queen Mary enroute to London. First time he crossed the Alantic, at 18, he was a coal stoker on a Norwegian steamer. "Hollywood Leg Man," a behind, the-tcenes account of gossip-gath. tring in movietown, hits the book stalls in August, Author . Jaik Rosenstein says that the list of personalities to get the barbecue treatment is too long to mention. But he ' admits that Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacell get turned over the hot charcoal. Jack I'aar s explanation of his three years at RKO during which he played only one minor role: "I was always loo young for old f arts and too old for young parts t was very confusing. I didn't know which way to grow." The Ritter Finger First time Joe Mankiewicz inter viewed Thelmo Ritter for her beer gazzling role in "Letter to Three Wives," she had a cut finger and was wearing a bandage. The bandage necessitated Thelma keep ing the finger pointed skyward and finally the distracted Joe interrup ed their talk with: "Tell me, Thelma, did you have that finger wrapped as a gift?" Mary McCnrty, here with "Miss Liberty," will do the Rosalind Russell role in the TV series of "My Sister Eileen." . . , .Johnny Mack Brown's daughter, Jane Harriet, nixed an acting career for the role of sketch artist for a California fashion magazine. Olivia de Havilland and Direc tor Hugo Fregonese are huddling on a screenplay tagged "Frenchy McCormick. It was written by actress-singer Theodora Lynch and concerns a woman who lived in a deserted ghost town for 20 GIANT MULTI-COLOR . Ptia foyourBacfcyardf il Z j4iKL' i D.lus. Pool -0'.F.L3f I ill sir It ' &St'!2? i n ,M,. -W j i V i DOWNSTAIRS STORE years' in order to be near the grave of her husband. Theodora's agent describes it: "A sort of Western Barretts o f Wimpole Street." Howard da Silva's opinion on actors who leave Hollywood for Broadway: "It's a good thing. Actors are migratory workers. No WASHINGTON (AP) The road to wealth can be paved with debts. H. J. Crawford of Emlenton, Pa., wealthy financier and oil promoter testifying yesterday at a power commission hearing, said he is 83 years old and "On Jan. 1, two years ago, I got out of debt for the first time since I was 12. "Every young man who has pride in himself ought to buy something, and get into debt. He'd spend the money for something else, anyway. That's how 1 did it." At the hearing Crawford offer ed to invest up to $1,520,000 to help finance construction of a pro posed natural gas pipeline in Northeastern Ohio. Boa constrictors and pythons are not poisonous. actor has the right to sink his roots down in Hollywood for good." . . . Walter O'Keefe's "Double or Noth ing" film may be picked up by Paramount for Betty Hutton. The Stanley Kramer organisa tion wes puzzled when an agent called to ask if they were doing a re-make of a picture in which Kay Francis and Ronald Colman once co-starred. The oldie was Cynera" NOT "Cyrano de Ber gerae." "The Cherry Orchard" opened at a Hollywood little theater and all the studio talent scouts were invited to scan the talent. Next j day 20th Century Fox signed Jack ' Kelly for a role in "Call Me Mis-. ter." Kelly wasn't in the play, j He's the manager of the theater! I WARNING! Freeze 'em! Kill 'em! Don't Let Moths Ruin Your Furs . . . Use Miller's Storage PEOPLE USE MORTON'S MORE I r"" I V r7 Pfain nr irir:erf When it rains it pours mm &m Straight Kentucky Bourbon in all its Glory! Naturally a finer drink iS2555 Naturally aged 4 years in wood III jp Naturally lighter in body gffl Naturally smoother in taste fS5 New Low Price $qo iwlS JiSOT. " . v' Never Sold until Four (4) Years Old! IS PROOF. KENTUCKY SfRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY. IKE SYAGG DISllUIMt CO., FIAJKFOIF, KEKIltKY. First of the Fine Cars in Value i i ' . "I if fal i Eusn ulFiser than He Seems Plainly, here travels a man wise In the ways of fine motorcars. hu know that, by the four Vcntiports and the rich sweep of chrome which mark his car as a Roadmaster. "ou know it, should you trail him on the highway, by the smooth lift of the big Fireball power plant at his toe's command, by the obvious level ncss of the ride he enjoys, the swift ease with which Dynaflow Drive solves his traffic problems. What is not so plain from what you see is that here also is a man very wise in what today's dollar should buy t For this man has all that a fine-car owner can ask for brilliant per formance, a ride without equal for gentle softness, finger-easy handling, abundant room all around him, styling that is easily the most distin guished on the highway. Yet he paid considerably less than comparable merit costs elsewhere. I Ie found fewer extra charges in his delivered price, with such things as Dynaflow Drive, foam rubber cushions, windshield washers, elec tric clock, even non-glare rear-view mirror included in the price. If youknow fine cars, it won't take fif teen minutes behind a Roadmaster wheel to see that here is one of the finest. If you'have inquired about prices, a single glance at the delivered figures establishes this as the big buy of the field. Why not make both checks espe cially since your Buick dealer will be glad to arrange a trial run in a Roadmaster any time you cane to call on him? mpy TlfM HI HfNffYI. TiVtO a a ij . . j m'111- mM.uimju.imnmm m. i I'li'iM mm m . n w n i i. m i n Only Buick has Drive and with it goes: HIGHt.-COMa.fSSION Fir. Soil nly.fa.lnaj pw.r in fSrM .njin.i. (Htw M6J engine la SUM mod.ij MfW rtrN SmiNO, wilk Ul.ri-OU0 l.r.(rol, top; thn,vgk IW.rt. "ffoubl. fcubblo" toiliighll WID-AN01I VISIIIlirr, toi.p rooJ ,i.w boll, orwnrd end bock TRf f (C-HANOr SIZf, i.u owed hnglh ler .oil.r porkina end gertiging, ifcort lurning rodiul f XTXA-kVIDf Jf TS crodl.rj li.rw..ri IS. eil.i SOFT UICIt IOf, from elloil pringing, Sol.lr iJ. rimi. lew.pr.nire Kr.i, (IJ..rl.orma lorem lube WIDS ARRAT Of MOOS1J with 8oo by ik.r. Standard on Roadmastkk, tptiont' at ntra eoM on Sun anil SrmcUL modaU. rouB-WAY roBcrsoNTnu n,so,d in .nd (V ntl thm ilyf. nof., (2) tov.t en rnpair colli varliraf bort er. inrfivfaualy r.pfacMbl., fjj evoidl "locking ftorns, (4J fnok.l porking end goroging .ofi.r. if r -i I .alt Rose and Washington mm Co. Phone 1551 WHIN IITTI AUTOMOIIlll ll IUUT IUtK WtU rlt TH!