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Show Old Timer Iy Herbert Ettenson it 6 "iO 16 r ' Attitudinize Creator Concerning the killing of a father 20 ' chemical action of light Praying figures in art Those people 7. " 51 53 54 58 emanations Washed lightly Kind of hat Brags Gamin 59. Ship-wor- m 60 61 62. 63 Fully grown pike Grimalkin Eagles Asiatic country . Aromas 1 12 An Vishnu Microscopic 52 53 IT . Pelted Garb .; I tt " T" if- - ' ' ' V J 1 V A I vfl wi SPr r "j Copyright 1954 Simon & its - T " it I .J" ir - " - sTo J'hT r mmm -wJmm "" r J 114 " t" jl IS llL II) tO III 51" - II - together ON PAGE - - I T'Tr f , 68 Strewn (Her.) 69 Kind of bean 72 Fib - T" "" 2" 1" """ j - ;"'"t5:. 66 Lease 2T jtt t petroleum 1 J5 - 57 Enervate 59 Figures of speech 61 Yields 62 Siberian stockade 64 Nicks F"k b 0"V .. r 54 Brooches 55 Carl 56 Constituent of T "T ff u 3T 7" ii Fiendish " Tarkington '"""i"-- " i - v Mimed Senile ANSWER TO CROSSWORD " - 1 character alphabet " .)- ' 77 Assuages " A '' 44 Silkworm 75 Odors 76 Letters of the. IT" '.I . 1 . 45 Deity 48 Bitter vetch 50 Eagles (S. Afr. D.) 7 $; ! 42 Bewilder !&sam turpentine 4 1 ' again (Colloq.) 40' Makes luminous 41 Foreign Tardy 70 Wagered 71 Of Naples '73 Constituent of Y - r.- (Hindu) merchant i " Dinner course Take umbrage 39 Come 69 i ' ) 'I - ' ' incarnation of Rubric 37 The infinite Famous New York 74 Barrier ' 35 Prominent ' U - , Scolded Choke Seal 34 Esquire (Poet.) . ' ' ,- 1- , South American bird 25 27 30 31 32 33 . 65 67 , ' 11 13 14 15 17 34 Spanish lady 36 Loathed 37 Atmosphere 38 Serranoid fish 43 Shoshoneans 44 Wrathful 46 Commits a wrong 47 A password 49 Bushy clump 50 Subtile . I 5 - 8 Judicious 9 Blissful 10 Van s .. J 5 Fasten 6 Guides , 32, Salute '1 Testament ' Gully The science of the 21 22 Stomata , 23 Character 24 Transgression 25 Isles 26 Doctrinarian 28 The sun's disk 29 Elbows 31 Chiropter S Enfeebles Ob j ects mentioned in the Old . . ' i r Gaiters Laugh uncontrollably ' Sea-du- ck 18 19 b. .f 'DOWN ACROSS 1 fri tiiiiyiw upat'iiiw' -" rm-tm- I rl-- Schuiter. All tighH r UU pf wir 1 rfved. 1 " mm mm mW- lrf When Iowa farm girl Donna Reed first read a sensational novel called From Here to Eternity, she was so embarrassed by its contents that she wrapped the book in a plain piece of brown paper so no one could tell what she was reading. . Several months later, she got the greatest satisfaction of her Hollywood career when author James Jones appeared on the set while his novel was being filmed and showed his hearty approval of Donna's acting of Alma, the cheap dance-ha- ll girl, v "Mr. Jones watched me for a few minute s doing one Of the framatic.'. scenesr" bpnna rwallsi and then made a circle with his thumb and and I knew I was in!". HollJwood made the same approving gesture on March 25 when it gave Donna an Academy Award as the best supporting actress of 1953 for her role in From Here to Eternity. After ten years of playing ''nice girls" in a series of forefinger ' " fair-to-middl- ing M - ; x Nh g ftj Mwl mrnmw mVm &mm hh mm mm mm pictures, Donna is following in the footsteps of Bette Davis as Jezebel and Vivien Leigh as Scarlett O'Hara, ac- tresses who won the precious Academy Award by being "bad." Donna was born in the small Iowa town of Denison, where her father, William R. Mullenger, is still a typical farmer. She learned to do all the chores as a child, at the samextime y taking care of her f our. younger brothers and sisters. She, can bake bread, drive a tractor, milk a cow. Donna's acting success is not based on looks alone, though she is certainly . " ) tops i brains and serious interest to her roles. "If an actress" is to portray a , -- female of indiscretion," she says, "then she must be subtle, never obvious, in her acting." ; Taking this proven formula for success, Donna's next picture for "Columbia is "They Rode West," in which she plays not just a flirt, but a "flirt with character," as she puts it. MAY 2, im FAMILY WEEKLY MAGAZINE 11 |