Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, October 20, 1963, Image 49

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    FREE
WHY
colorful IDEA BOOK
Beauty & privacy! Armstrong's
fast-growing rose hedge!
Red Glory
Living Fence
i
Ltarn thi facts about the world's most
amazing -and all America's favorite
Living Fence. Armstrong's Red Glory Is
the ontjr rose fence specially developed
to make your home more beautiful, valu
able, private.. .for only pennies a foot.
Grow your own privacy .. .with a riot of
radiant, gorgeous Red Glory roses ... In
a few weeks. Red Glory Living Fence
thrives nearly anywhere; grows in any
soil... we replace, absolutely tree of
charge, any plant lhat doesn't grow.
Grows quickly up to 6' high. Keeps chil
dren and pels in: intruders out.
Armstrong Nurseries, Dept. 0-1
Ontario, California
Please send me my tree full color book
let about Red Glory Living Fence.
Name
Addrtj&s.
City
Zone
Cm Siml hit tittl
ana you'll My:
I'M so happy
WITH
biwoil"
BIROIL a I
ARANTEEI
OR YOUR MONEY BACK
Stroll work . . . w fuararttaa It tr monty
back. Stroll topt tha Itching, nmovti
ambarra.aing tcala and crust, and il'a
aty to uta. Milllona ol bottlaa ol Stroll have
bjm Mid. Gal Stroil today at all drug Mora.
FOR FREC BOOKLET on rHorta.t.. writtan I
by doctor: WRITE Siroll La bora tor tat, I
Dapl. rrio. Santa Monica, California. I
NAME J
ADDRESS fr I
CITY STATE , . !
No Nagging
Backache Means a
Gaod Night's Sleep
N,nrns backache, headache, or nucu
lar aches and paina mar coma on with
over-exertion, emotional upsets or day
to day stress and Btrain. And folk, who
rat and drink unwisely sometimes Buffer
mild bladder Irritatiun.. .with that rest
leaa. uncomfortable feellne.
If you are miserable and worn out be.
cauae of theaediacomforta. Doan'a PiUsnf.
ten help by their pain-relieving action, by
their soothing effect to ease bladder Irri
tation, and by their mild diuretic action
through the kidneys tending to Increase
the output of the 16 miles of kidney tubes.
So If nagging backache makes you feel
ilraggcd-out, miserable, with restless,
sleeiilesa nights, don't wait, try Dnan't
Pills, eel the same happy relief millions
have enjoyed for over 60 years. For con
venience, ask for the large slse. Get
loan's IMlla toriayl
Hollywood was taken by surprise a few
months ago when 24-year-old Dolores
Hart, one of the screen's most promising
actresses, gave up her career to become a
Roman Catholic nun.
Dolores is not the first star to forego a promising
career for religious reasons. In 1952, June Haver, then
one of Hollywood's top actresses, entered a convent at
the peak of her professional success. It didn't last.
A year later she declared that she could not adjust her
self to the strenuous life of a postulant and returned
to Hollywood. She did not resume acting, but eventual
ly married Fred MacMurray.
Incidentally, there are a number of similarities be
tween the two women.
Both are converts to Catholicism. Both had just lost
a fiance June through death when Dr. John Duzik
died in 1951, Dolores by choice when she broke off her
engagement to van-and-storage executive Don Robin
son early this year. But June, who had been married
and divorced from trumpet player Jimmy Zito, was
thrown into utter despair by her fiance's death, while
the split-up of Dolores and Don seemed to have had
no visible effect on her.
Dolores had been considering joining a religious
order since 1958. Unknown even to her closest friends,
she attended religious retreats at the St. Bernadine
Sisters Provincial House in North Stamford, Conn.,
twice a year. This is the convent that she joined a
short time ago.
I remember when I first met Dolores five years ago.
just after a friend, Don liarbeau. sent some pictures
of her to Paramount.
When Dolores heard about it, she didn't think she
would even be considered. "You've been shut away
from the world too long," she told Don, who had just
returned from a Trappist monastery where he had
planned to become a monk. "Girls like me just don't
get into motion pictures."
To her surprise, Dolores was called for an interview,
signed a long-term contract, and promptly found her
self cast opposite Elvis Presley in "Wild Is the Wind."
SHE I
drt
looked most unlike a budding actress when she
Irove up to my house in an ancient Chevy converti
ble that sputtered as it climbed our driveway. She wore
a skirt, white blouse, cardigan, and "practical" walk
ing shoes. She was not strikingly beautiful, but pleas
antly attractive and down-to-earth in her approach to
her career.
"I don't want a lot of money," she insisted. "I don't
want to drop names or go to parties simply because
important people are there. I just want to prove that I
can make it and stand on my own feet."
Five years later I couldn't detect a change in her
attitude only greater maturity and maybe a little
more doubt in herself for not having met the right
man and married and started to raise a family.
"Maybe I am too old-fashioned," she told me a few
months ago when I took her and her grandmother to
dinner in London. By then, Dolores had become one of
the most-in-demand young actresses in Hollywood.
Dolores had starred in more than a dozen films, in
cluding "Loving You," "King Creole," "Miss Lonely
hearts," "The Plunderers," "Where the Boys Are."
"Lisa," "Come Fly with Me," and "Francis of Assisi,"
Fmnilu Weekly, October 20. IH3
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