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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 28, 1945)
PAGE FOURTEEN The OFXGON STATESMAN. Solin. Oron. Sunday. Morning. October 23. 1915 Lassie Gome Home Movie w at Ca pitol Lassie, the collie which set a Hollywood record by winning stardom in her first picture. "Las sie Come Home," chalks up an other "Xirst" of the canine world In' her second picture, ;i "Son ol Lassie" now playing at the Capi toL She tflays a dual role in the new Technicolor hit. ' :; , .In opening scenes of the new M-G-M film, she appears as her self. Lassie, . Just as in her first picture and after the birth of her puppies. Then through the rest of the story, she portrays her own son, after he grows into a full sized and beautiful dog. : ; In doing so, Lassie also re sumes "her" rightful, sex. "She" actually is a male collie. - Draperies Are Made For Four Corners Hall AUBURN Several members of the Auburn Woman's club met with Mrs. Stuart Johns Wednes : day to sew on the draperies for -the tytvr community hall at the Your Corners. A, covered dish "din ner was served at the noon hour. Today Mon. and Tucs. ,. v mlHIUIr I Co-Feature -"V":- '. ' -r. , ' '' ; , S - .. - ,- - l J MlieewMwejwwMeMMSVA .,eW Jaw : am iMSSiissMSllJtMJSsssssSBWt mwm rmatiM -. i flkci "Son f Laasle, M-GM's glorious sequel to beloved "Lassie Come Home," now showing at The Capitol;! Theatre. Filmed ia breath takliur Technicolor, it features Donald Crisp. Nirel Brace and (above) Peter Lawford and Jane Lockhart with Lassie. i CpSQErqDDDDDD TdDQuaiy Most all of you have your bVlbs planted now, or at least ordered. Of course. If you haven't there is still a little time,fs-rV although the : 9 " i V .if . f choice In vane tles has been thinned out con siderably. Bit, taking it for granted that the bulb situa tion is now well in hand, it is time to turn your at tention to roses. Not that you 1 A A Will waniio Will. Madsen plant them yet Between Thanks giving and Christmas Is the time I like best to plant .mine. Other growers like to wait until Febru ary or evert" March. However, no matter what time you choose to plant them, now is the time to begin ordering them. If you do not order them in time, then you will have the same trou ble as late purchasers "have had with bulbs. There may be plenty Continuous Today From I:tO TM. Roy Rogers, Trigger Star In Grand Film Pack with action, new! tunes and comedy, Sunset in El Dorado," latest of the cycle of musical westerns starring Roy Rogers, opened at the Grand theatre ye- terady,; . . . V Unusual in plot, the screen play contains , a . dream . sequence in which the action of the film moves back: frnm the present to the gold rush period of the 90s when the west was young, and townssprung up overnight as new "strikes" were reported by the prospectors. . Tetty, . blonde -Dale Evans, singer Sand actress, lias the femi nine lead opposite the Kin of the Cowboys in the film,' and de livers songs and dialogue with i a refreshing charm.-She portrays a young 'career woman, who is lec turer lor a travel bureau, but who longs to learn for . herself about the romantic places she "sells" to travellers. On an impulse she leaves her, Job and strikes out for V I. 1. Key Rogers, Dale Evans and George "Gabby" Ilayes, as. they appear In "Sunset In El Dorado," Republic's superdeluxe musical prodae- Uon with western backrround, now at The Grand. left, but the kinds you particularly wanted are "out of stock." j 1 1 notice in the autumnf Amer ican Rose society's repor of roses rating over 75 per cent ire includ- A Phristonher Stone. -i Cimarron. Crimson Glory, E cl i p s e, Good 1 News, Grand Duchesse. Charlotte,f , Magic Red, McGreddy's! Yellow, Mrs. Miniver, Sir Henry Seagrave, Snowbird, as well as a; score of others. I took these, because the comments, aside from the rating, were very favorable. I noted that while Betty Uprichard rated in the 75 per cent favorable criticisms it carried the remark "Poor on the Pacific coast" which was news to me as one, growing in ray neigh bor's garden, is almost always a perfect success both as to growth of foliage, buds, color and alL Crimson Glory, as I mentioned after attending the PorjJand Rose show,; is proving popular everywhere- To me, it is one of, the finer reds, although Christopher Stone is also a favorite with many. In yellow roses McGreddy's yel low and Eclipse are hard to beat " vT " f ' the west to find the ghost town wherever own grandmother once sang as belle of-; "El Dorado." There she finds' her grandmoth er's portrait and ' also , finds Roy Rogers.-. Rogers, rifles and sings through the picture , with the easy charmL which has endeared him to millions of fans.! V, : -4 j . George "Gabby" Hayes is seen as a prospector who is fleeced out of a rich ' gold strike,, there V music by Bob Nolan and the Sons of the Pioneers, Hardie Al bright is convincing in his role as the "heavy" while Margaret Du mont adds to the comedy relief of the film. . - t . ' IT 0 1 A 4 -K 4 iff si f Jeanne Crain, Fay Bainter and Dick Haymes, wmtcfainr the excttlnc races in "State Fair," a Twentieth Century-Fox technicolor musie- i comedy opens today at The Elsinore Theatre. - i . the Continuous Today From I:tO TM, m Slarls Tciay 2 Big HUs! j Touth. Beauty I r Gayety , " j RomaiiceifiEo: V I kAnT00X:'Kt I EEMtT SIr3 iV '-J? 1 Ii OUTLOUD! : jl 11 1 1 J . 7a FAY IAI H T E I Jill ICS"''' 1 Dlwits I a II! I Adventure Action I I JrlUS t U-IllI "Behind City Lights'9 i For cannery wcrk ca beds, cauliflower, and apples. Day shill 7:33 a. p. !o 6:C3 ia.; nigh! siili 7:33 pi a. to 6:C3 a, n. Free irahsporialicn. Inc. At Liberty Telephone Salem 22036 newer planning this au y set the ther Nor following particularly among roses; Chrysanthemum Show C Salem Heights club is a chrysanthemum show tumn but has not definite! dates. Final, arrangements will be made! Oct 30. It will be held at the YMCA building on e: vember Z and 4 or the weekend." '.:?& Answers to Questions: E. ill. asks If-magnolias can be grown from seed. ) Ans.: Seed is one of the ap proved methods of propagating magnolias. Says Alfred Gh Hottes: It is dangerous to let the pulp rot away;! as the fungus which causes the pulp to decay spreads through the seed-coat and into? the seed. Soak the seeds for a few days In pure water or water , to which a little 'Washing soda or wood ashes is added; then remove the pup by rubbing the seeds with the hands through a sieve. Do not Store them dry but keep them in moist sand. Sow thg seed in a frame or flat this falL When the second leaf appears, pot . them up and carry them over in frames. Stocks for grafting, "as well as the true specimens . are grown from seed.' . jf f O. S, C. 'wants to know if the Irish yew can be started! by cut tings, : .. . . v Ans.: Yes, very easily.! If bot tom heat in a frame is. available. the yew starts even more readily. But jthey will start in a jframe if sharp: sand is used. ' yV Mrs. K. w. B. describes a dis ease of her prune, tree and wants to know what it is and what to do. As she lives not too fair from the post office at Salem, id suggest that she ask the' county agent I'd have; to ask him and she might get a quicker reply if she went to his office. D, M. A. wants to know how 'State Fair Latest Haymes Vehicle Playing)dt Elsinore . "State Fair," 20th Century-Fox musical which opens. today at the Elsinore Theatre, marks an all-time high in entertainment First they commissioned no less a team than Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II, who sent Broadway Into unprecedented hooplas, to fill "State Fair" with glorious music such as has never been heard in a film before. Then they put four of the screen's most brilliant young stars Dana An drews,-Jeanne Crain, Dick Haym es and Vivian Blaine into j top roles , and backed" them with a swell supporting . cast, including Charles Winninger, Fay Bainter, Donald Meek, Frank McHugh, Percy Kilbride and Henry i Mor gan. And. finally they dipped I the whole: lavish production into gor geous Technicolor that's ; a joy to behold. - 4 As the millions who have, read Philip Stong's beloved novel must know, "State Fair" tells of the richly human, radiantly Joyous many years hollyhocks will con tinue to bloom. Ans.: As a rule new hollyhock plants fare the better. About the third year the old plants do not do very well. The plants are best if treated as biennials. S. C, writes to tell me that the "enclosed leaves seem Quite dis eased and will you please tell me what to do." Ans.: But there are no enclosed leaves,: so I cannot answer this rone, -s . adventures of a mid-west family during one hectic and enchanted week at the fair a week on which they had pinned their fond est dreams of glory and romance How they each realized their goal makes for a grand, heart-warm ing story packed with robust hu mor .and ' thrilling romance throughout THTsnrta - CONT. FROM I P. M. -NOW PLrViTNG! TWO TERRIFIC HITS! hi Clamour i S? 18 DIE I AV I BRACKEN Salt Creek Buy Potter Place Near EHendale ELLENDALE Mr. and Mrs. Jay Brown of the. Salt .Creek dis trict have purchased the Howard Potter place in Ellendale. ' They will continue the opera ticai of the riding club at the academy ranch in which . they have beerf s in terested. " - - iThey formerly . owned the - Salt Creek store and service - station but sold this property ; to , Ernest McCully of Dallas McCully was .formerly employ ed in the Jones Shoe Shop and took Over the store at Salt Creek Wednesday.'.-? ' , i The ' Potter family , moved ; to CO-FEATUREI GINGER ROGERS "5th AVE. GIRL" JACK CARSON TIM HOLT TMC WfHIC TWIT mrs UlfT CONT. FROM 1 PJML How Playicgl Dr' Bingl i ! . Back In On o! His' Gayest of Hits! Bing ACADEMY WINNER CROSBY . In "Doctor Rhylhm" SHIRLEY ROSS THRILL CO-HIT! QuonL J ' - they resided befort coming herfc Mr. and Mrs. iwennew muuo are building a new nouse ana ex pect to move by November J. BswLmlssiivSassllllslBswssssssB Continaoas from 1 P. M. NOW SHOWING! Hoy Rogers mmmmmmmmtmmmmwmmmmm v. . . S3"-- .0 THRILL CO-HIT 1 TRUE STORY OF THE RACKETS! SPECIAL NAVY NEWS I The Fleet Comes Home la Triumph! nun.. 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