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Beatrice Daily Sun from Beatrice, Nebraska • 6
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Beatrice Daily Sun from Beatrice, Nebraska • 6

Location:
Beatrice, Nebraska
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Dairies protest state milk laws HOUYWOOD TODAY Gunsmoke, Have Gun face Eafrice Daily Sua, Beatrice, Aug. 16, 1959 Charley Weaver ihuUds an empire new compefition-sex! The Horse Soldiers' Epic conflict that shortened the Civil War a One of the most dramatic and exciting incidents of the Civil War supplies the fabric for the story of "The Horse Soldiers," the now producing telefilms, the Urn agent, who figured It wouldn't do him much good. It didn't do the -t jr I '2'- 1 i Mt-i 1 1 -in 11 11 1 111 1 11 1 mi .1 jt.yi inwmm mui Marlowe who led a daring raid John Wayne plays Lt Colonel agalmt a Confederate railroad the CM War. "Thi Horse soldiers," opens today at tne fox Theater. Case dismissed By DICK KLEINER NEW YORK (NEA) la Ml time, CM Arquette has had hi and downs.

But the way things are going, It looki like all up from here on. He's in the happy position of having tamed down, in the past few months, offera to do eight Broadway plays, a handful of movies, some TV aituatlon comedies a flock of apeci! J0 number of super market openings. He'i said no to everything, for the simple reason that he doesn't need the work. "I've had some lean years and some good years," he said. "I had it made few times, then blew it, mostly on bad investments.

But I've got a good business manager now. And he keeps, telling me, 'For God's sakes, dont take any more work, you'll ruin It wasn't always thus. Arquette in his pre-Ourley Weaver days, started out to be a cartoonist. When he was 1 or 17, he "kept bugging" NEA Service, in Cleveland, for Job until the artists themselvehired him to run out for coffee. After a few months of that, they Jet him do a cartoon panel.

"I got an office," he says, "which was a broom closet with the brooms still in it. And I diJ a panel of dot drawings the kind the kids connect and draw an animal. I wanted to sign it but they wouldn't let me, so I got mad." With his cartooning days behind him. he went into show business. Even in those early days, he spe cialized in acting old men.

"I like old men." he says. "And I-was too shy to be myself. At parties, nobody paid attention to mc, as myself, so I started telling Mokes as an old man. It worked. yrevy soon, was inrown oui of the parties." i Through the years, he's been on hundreds of radio shows, mostly an old man.

So, when TV start raising its coaxial head, he was ready. "I decided I needed a charac ter I could erow into," he says. "So I began working up this old man I'd spend hours of the Old Men's Home in Sautele, Calif. In those tlays, there were Spanish-Ameri-l ean veterans there, and I'd sit 'around and talk to those cats." i And he discovered the things 'that make Charley Weaver so well without ever offending any- body, He noticed that most old men never study how they put on their ties "they just tie it and where it is, that's where it stays" 1 A. I or weir nais long a 000 epic production opening today at the Fox Theatre through United Artists release.

This was the incredibly bold and heroic six hundred mile raid through Confederate territory of Colonel Benjamin Grierson and his brigade of Union cavalry. Historians have credited this remarkable feat with having mercifully shortened the conflict, by as much as a full year, with the saving of perhaps 100,000 lives. John Wayne and William Holden are starred in "The Horse Soldiers and two famous Gibsons Hoot the great cowboj star of yesteryear; and Althea, the awe in spiring young Negro girl athlete- are featured. A lovely newcomer to pictures, Constance Towers mak es her film debut in the drama. Filmed in DeLuxe color on loca tion in Mississippi and Louisiana, in the actual country through which Grierson's column made its fa mous raid, "The Horse Soldier" is a Mirisch Company presentation.

Jack Lee Mahin and Martin Rack- in produced the film, and also wrote the screenplay, an adapta tion of Harold Sinclair's best-sell-fhg novel. "The Horse Soldiers," a Mahin- Rackin production was directel by John Ford, Hollywood only possessor of six Academy Awards. The author of Grierson's raid was, actually, none other than General Ulysses S. Grant. In April of 1863, Vicksburg was under seige; Grant had been trying to take the river city for some ten months without success.

At time, the war was going badly for the North in the field, in Wash ington and in the newspapers. It was -vital that Vicksburg be taken before the summer ended so that Grant could launch his stalled drive to overwhelm the Confederacy. In desperation, the General con ceived the scheme of sending a brigade of cavalry through hun dreds of miles of rebel held terrl tory to attempt to destroy Newton Station, the all important supply center for Vicksburg. He called Grierson in, confided his plan; and most exciting history of the entire colorful and tragic Civil War. First woman lawyer to appear before a jury in America was AJlna Christy Fall, of Boston, in 1891.

GETS THE POINT Dennis comedy swing with a new TV Eloise Hardt, when he portrays a i tn. milium. I -i YkI tL3L. In in stronghold and turned the tide of to those used by doctors to listen to heartbeats to pick up the ticking of the meter, and dropped in another nickel. The normal meter runs 120 beats to the minute, he said, This particular meter was four minutes fast and the mechanism that sends up the red flag was another minute ahead of itself.

Prinz compared his recording with a humidity and temperature sensitive time tape and clocked off 30 minutes for accurate com parison. Finally he dumped his data into an electronic business machine and came up with his missing five minutes. "Case dismissed," said the judge, citing as grounds that the city failed to prove the charge. Swiss Yodel ACROSS 6 Tribunal 7 Lincoln's nickname 8 Without (Latin) 9 Finalities 10 Fewer 12 Levantine ketch 13 Cubic meter 18 Legal point 20 Looked slyly 21 Arctoid 22 Approached 23 Mistakes 1 Capital of Switzerland 6 Rhine river port of this country 11 Worships 13 Antarctic mountain 14 Italian condiment 15 Tendencies 16 Dutch uncle 17 Wrath 19 Suffix 20 Swiss lake 24 Hoarder 27 Soothsayer 24 Italian millet 25 Soviet name 26 Squalid area 28 British school 31 Amorous looks 29 Location 32 Mr. Shaw 33 Mohammedan nymph 84 Plant parts 35 Ancient country 38 Sea eagles 39 Requisitions 41 Goddess of the dawn 44 Affirmative 45 Peer Gynt's mother 4830 (Fr.) 51 Bed canopy 54 Sell In small lots 55 Penetrates 56 Flower 57 Sentience DOWN 1 Mitigate 2 Type of.

cheese 3 Italian city 4 "Blue Eagle" 5 Contract" I 1 ii jrpr ii LZZZ II HI 11? 9 I I 1 I Is ripe for a repeat telling or wnt happened at Paramount back in 1949. Hollywood was viewing Tv with alarm because of a dropping box office and a meeting of studio big wheels was callel to discuss the situation. All of the studio brass, includ ing C. B. DeMllle.

decided thera was no problem. TV Just couldn't compete with movies. TV had no stars, no money, no lavish sets and studio space. It was an en tirely different medium. Like ra dio, it would give movie makers no competition.

There was nothing to worry about. Finally the voice of the studio's semiretired elder statesman, Adolph Zukor, lashed out with the words: 'Gentlmen," you're talking hog- wash." Zukor had been listening to the rosv optimism with closed eyes focused on the future he saw for Hollywood and it wasn't rosy. "Gentlemen," said, "TV basi cally is a movid screen. We've got to give the people more for their dollars or go out of business or join TV." The Paramount brass listened to the old showman and then, in the privacy of their own offices, they dismissed his predictions as t- landish. One executive, no longer at Paramount, even went so far as to say: "The old boy Is a little senile, you know." One movie actor neat words on realizing the importance of TV as a medium for him.

Says Wendell Corey: "I got the message real quick one day when I saw a 40 foot tower topped by a 1 aerial on a two bedroom house." and Speaker Service and now our Nov Dining Room end Party Service Chicken Steaks T-Bones Shrimp Short Orders Sandwiches Don't forget to try our noon luncheon soon. Well be looking for yon. Kenny's Drive Inn Cafe Phone CA 3-2232 At Soutst Viaduct HI way 77 vnuuua MiRt 0ULY THE 0RIAT n.trc ntu FORD'S QDCOTANIC jpurb (ncrry ouf LINCOLN (APWThree dairies have filed a suit in Lancaster District Court contesting the validity of a new state law which permits the sale of only Grade A milk. The Lincoln Dairy Hebron Dairy and the Spring Creek Dairy of Deshler filed against Pearle F. Finigan, director of the Department of Agriculture and Inspec tion; G.

B. Flagg, head of the Dairy Bureau, and the state's Grade A Milk Advisory Board. The dairies, all of which pro duce Grade milk, contend that Grade milk is "pure, whole some and entirely sanitary and fit for human consumption." They say the new law is unfair and discriminatory and il an unnecessary restriction of trade." The Lincoln Dairy Co. produces both Grade A and Grade milk, but the other two say they pro duce only Grade milk. They say Grade milk is homogenized and pasteurized the same as Grade A milk.

So sorry, sir, too wet to take reading MEXICO CITY (AP) A downpour flooded sections of the Mexican capital Friday night. A reporter called the Weather Bureau for information. "I'm sorry," came the reply, "I can't give you the information. The gauge is outside and I can not go out. It's raining." Confenfed bossy WINDSOR, Ont.

(AP) Here's a cw that is contented in cap tivity. Bossy is an inmate of the Windsor State Prison Farm. She produced 102 pounds of butterfat in May to lead Windsor County in the field, says agricultural agent Bill Stone. Her name, since she is a prison cow, is a number: 1571. Indians of the north Pacific coast prize the candlefish as food and for its oil.

Answer to Previous Puzzle 30 Soap-making 45 Solar disk frame 46 Indian weights 47 Gaelic 49 Burmese 36 Incite to action 37 Swiss river 40 Memorandum 41 French verb 42 Soviet city 43 Bristle wood sprite 50 Bind 52 Abstract being 53 Female saint (ab.) (comb, form) Tonight It's not true what they JLVASWDS CHHS ROSSOS rti v. Mi. LJ KiOl.lLLS a i ZLa A- en a b. yJT nTa 3 ate I gp-JEi! nto 'd Q- 5M13A12, tK TTt pK A Nk5E NjE 6 ATE SM. TlE ktelJglgTr A SSl TqLETs'UKE A SigTTSIT 6 A gffn ETA IaMnIei sac 0' 41 f( or fly ERShJNE JOHNSON HOLLYWOOD (NEA) -Sex-weekly changes of scenery Italian glamour girl and a Cary Grant type leading man They will be opposite the CBS powerhouse, "Have Gun, Will Travel" this fall in what promises to be thq season's most interesting audience rating, duel.

NBC Is out to win the Saturday night audience away' from CBS, which lt failed to do last year with another western, "Cimarron City." Trying again this year, NBC's competition will be "Five Fin gers," a one hour flff thriller film ed at 20th Century Fox film studio and costarring David Hedison (who was billel as Al Hedison when played the scientist in the movie, The and red haired Lu- ciana Paluzzi. She's a la-la Paluz- zi with black eyes, curves like the Italian coast line, and a record of 18 Italian movies before she was brought to Hollywood. There could be audience trouble brewing for Dodge City and Pala din and if it happens you can bet rival networks will be throw ing sex against all the top rated Western shows Which is bad? If you've been conscious of TV going Hollywood, there's a clinch er for you now. The producer of Joel McCrea's new NBC TV ser ies, "Wichita Town," is Walter Mirisch. The crelits will not mention it, of course, but Mirisch, who pro duced the Marilyn Monroe, i Some Like it Hot," is president of Hollywood's Screen Producers Guild.

The "Johnny Staccato" seriei headed for TV this fall just had a title change to "Staccato." The opposing CBS show will be "John nv Ringo" and NBC didn't want viewers going to the wrong Johnny Candid fan letter to Edd (Rook ie) Byrnes he may have trouble answering: "I've seen all your films. How come you always comb your hair?" Television has resultel in some rather curious conversations, you know, and here's another one for the electronic age scrapbook. When the 1939 movie. "On Borrowed Time," played on TV, one time movie kid star Bobs Watson alerted his young nephew: "You can see me on TV tonight." Ta which the lad, son of TV newsreel cameraman, Harry Watson, quickly asked: "As a man or as a little boy?" With all the major movie studios Peach Ice Cream gal. 89c Root Beer qt.

25c Harold's Corner (Formerly FlsheraMce Cream) PIZZA FRESH BAKED Phorvs orders ready on arrival. CA 3-2145 Croy's Drivc-ln JOHN THIIWnPDIMn with CONSTANCE TOWERS. STARTS TODAY Cont. Shows i v. A it.

agent much good Arquette dropped him. Actually, Cliff had been retired, but came back out of restlessness. Nowadays, he's his own agent "I learned how to say no, and that's all you need to be an agent." He still has retirment on his mind, figuring he'll have had it in three more years. Consequently, all his prsent contracts expire in three years. That's even true of the contract for his upcoming (probr ably in December) TVshow, which he won't discuss but which, ac cording to rumor, will be a moder nized, Weaverized version of "Hobby Lobby." Before that, though, he's plan ning to drag out some more mem bers of the Weaver family on the Paar show.

Already, Charley mother has appeared, and Cliff has plans to introduce Charley's father and his grandfather com plete with long white beard. Charley Weaver: $250 for a bag In the pants. Cliff Arquette: Pixie with a love of life. Arquette is now 53, a round-faced, white-haired, blue-eyed pixie with a great love of life and a fondness for both fun and money, He's found both in Gettysburg, where he has a museum full of his collection of Civil War uni forms Gettysburg, of course, is President Eisenhower's adopted home and Aruqette noticed that, when Ike was there, he came out of church promptly at 10:20 a. m.

on Sundays. So Arquette careful ly timed his own trip to the church and delights in pulling up, amid squealing crowds, at 10: 19 "And when the President com es out," he says, "there's nobody around. One of these days, he'll say. "who's that little fat fellow?" As for money, Arquette, between his TV, book, records, museum and other enterprises, will never have to worry again. "I call it," he says, The Charley Weaver To London for wedding of son NEW YORK (AP)-Mrs.

Nelson A. Rockefeller plans to fly to London Sunday night, enroute to her son Steven's wedding to Anne Marie Rasmussen at Sogne, Norway. The wedding is set for a week from today. A Drug I i jceeps the sun off their heards, it's ok." He decided not to use any make-; up for Charley Weaver. First, he's i allergic to makeup and, second, his own ruddy complexion photo- graphs well.

He began making his own wigs that's one of his many 'Sidelines but quit when he hit it big on The Jack Pear Show and suddenly needed five wig at ionoe. i "They cost $350 apiece," he says ladly. i i J4 1 8 10 uW T' "a zi iZZ iT1- Tun I I ff MORRISTOWN, N. J. (AP) Arnold Sprinz beat a $1 overtime parking ticket in Municipal Court with the aid of a transistorized stethoscope, a tem perature humidity sensitive time tape, and an electronic "brain." Sprinz, 28, an aeronautical en gineer, otterea tne results 01 nis precision monitoring equipment to the court to prove that the meter short-timed him by five minutes the half hour for which he put his nickel.

He borrowed the transistorized stethoscope similar in principle Dual anniversary celebrated in Korea SEOUL (AP) South Korea Saturday celebrated a dual anniversarythe 11th of the founding of the republic and the 14th of her liberation from four decades of Japanese rule. Some 50,000 students and citizens attended a government sponsored rally at the Seoul Stadium ball park. Feature Times FOX "Horse Soldiers," 2:20, 4:45 7:10 9:35. HOLLY "Nioic," 2:08, 4:29, 6:50, 9:11. "Hercules," 2:38, 4:59, 7:20, 9:41.

O'Keefe gets back into the show. Gal is his1 gal Friday, columnist named Hal Towne. r- 'Cast of THOUSANDS! Cost in MILLIONS! 1 1 J. r. 1 nww i -t- unaney ciouies cos i more man tpfTi $250 a suit, mostly be-i cause there were few tailors who can turn out the proper Weaver 1 "I tried growing my own mustache," he says, "but it ruined love life." His first appearance on the Paar Show was over the protests of his i i FREE DRAWING 1 fWl TV DPfTPC For Grade School -I1 And Hlah Sehnnl fitiirUnfe Register Today at MONTCKMIERY WARDS WEEKEND SPECIAL Hamburgers Croy's Drive-in if.

i pnont orders ready en arrival. CA 3-2145 lJ y-T--r' Jiir-i-m-i Sho1ng newt Showing Dmi ik et ker hmca 1 i.i'.i. anno! I r. Is, AV 'i Sunday Menu Serving at 1 1 A.M.' S3 NOWTHE UNCHAINED AVENGER EMERGES FROM THE RAGING- RIOTS AND REVELS OF 10,000 YEARS AGO! Jr Jr Stork tint 1 ft CHOICE OF Vegetable Soup or Grapefruit Juice Club Steak 39 Fried Chicken 95c Chicken Fried Steak 95c French Fried Shrimp with French Fries' 95c Children's portion 65c SERVED WITH Whipped PotatoesGravy Green Beans Combination Salad Rolls Butter Sherbet Beverage HOME MADE PIES 15c APPLE CHERRY mi 'iLTwTcssai-JOHN HE UAHN JWRTW M' 5 i air Worren's Also Vclf Disney's "Niok" in color Admkslon Adtilti Children 25c 6th and Court atwlnf Jodyfeir Martin Braddock Hint Bwvtar.

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Pages Available:
451,039
Years Available:
1902-2024