The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 45, No. 125, Ed. 1 Monday, July 27, 1936 Page: 4 of 6
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r FOUR
The El Reno Daily Tribune P
A Bine Ribbon Newspaper Serving A Bine Ribbon Conmnuttj *11
«,.aISSi,ed.,daUy excePt Saturday from 207 South Rock Island avenue
■M entered as second-class mall matter under the act of March 3, 1879,
BUDGE HARM!
News Editor
RAV J. DYER
Editor and Publisher
DEAN WARD
Advertising Manager
Ws paper, and also to all the local news therein
Al1 ‘ ^hts ot publication of special dispatches herein are also reserved
MEMBLR OF THE NATIONAL EDITORIAL ASSOCIATION
and
THE OKLAHOMA PRESS ASSOCIATION
National Advertising Representative*
FROST, LANDIS ti ROHN
New York, Chicago, Detroit, St. Icuis, Dallas,
Atlanta, San Francisco
EL RENO (OKLA.) DAILY TRIBUNE
IN FILM POST
AND NO DETOUR AHEAD
<
_• MONDAY, JULY 27, im
Oklahoman Is Prominent
Hollywood Playwright
Editor’s Note: This is the fifth
In a ser.es of articles pertaining to
Oklahomans in the movies, wrlt-
len by ,he United Press corres-*
ponclent from Sapulpa while on
vacation in the film colony.
DAILY SUBSCRIPTION RATES BY MAIL IN CANADIAN AND
By tarriM ADJOINING COUNTIES
Wte'c ------------$ 12 Three months______ gj *«
rtree months----------11.35 Six months___ mm
One^ year -----------------$5.40 One year________ ~~HQ»
MONDAY. JULY 27. 1938.
WFitrAv* - js r
lh> rod a,,d Ihv staff they comfort me.—Psalms 23:1.
NEW YORK . Out
BY DON O’MALLEY
BY RICHARD CALDWELL
HOLLYWOOD. July 27-<U.R» —
“Turn ’em over’’ Isn’t the only order
in the movie world that beckons
Oklahomans. There’s another prin-
cipality in that realm that, is al-
most equally as engaging.
Lynn Riggs, playwright and author,
has answered the call. It Is in the
scenario and play adaptation divi-
sion of movie production. Riggs
has Just completed dialogue for the
story of the “The Garden of
Allah.”
Tills Oklahoman spends a part of
his time in Santa Pe. N M.. and
the remainder in Hollywood and
New York.
Born In Claremore, Riggs spent
most of his earlier days In Okla-
homa. He was a student in the
University of Oklahoma, and at one
time was an instructor in English
there.
/
m
LIBRARY NOTES
VIEW YORK. July 27 — Alfred ] favorite method of getting even
1 n Lunt. whose passion U is to j with offending members of the cast
cook when he’s not acting, was j is to bribf the property man in
spared an unpleasant session a charge of the food that may be
few weeks ago because of encoun- called for in the stage directions iin 1922 an(l started writing in earn-
tering a fellow recipe fanatic. It’s easy to see what happens I est- “Knives of Syria.” which tie
wrote in 1924. initiated him Into
Has Traveled Widely
He went to Santa Pe for a rest
Lunt and Lynn Fontanne. his I to an actor who may hate 'lamb
wife, had just moved out of a stew when the script calls for a
furnished apartment which they supper in Act Three But the
had sub-leased. It was the first j most effective revenge stunt is to
time in years that, they had rent- put real booze in an actor’s drink
ed an apartment for themselves, j Ordinarily a glass of stage whis-
and they were quite relieved to be key Is just plain, weak tea In
in a place of their own 1 the course of a full-length plav a
A few days later, the man who 1 performer may be called uuon to
had sub-leased to them wrote Lunt imbibe half a dozen potions of the
a letter accusing him of having I liquid. Rivals with a sense of
made off with a valuable lamp and fun merely see to it that some
demanding Hint he settle for *100 good. 100-proof rve Is accidentally
Now Lum had never taken the substituted.
lamp and it seemed to be just a By the end of the evening the
gag to hold him up because of his victim Is lucky if he can stamrer
prominence i off the stage without bringing
In a towering rage the actor down all the summer scenery ud-
picked up the phone and called his j on his head. H
former landlord's number. The! * * *
wife answered. listened to Lunt’s COMPETITION The salesman in i. .. . ---------
Irate expostulations and then as- the cutlery store had the last word a,ter P'!,v wtl*1 “** idea of adapt,
sured him she knew nothing of the other afternoon when I com- 1 mK 11 to th® sc,een-
.. meiited upon the necessity of pav-
... "esldPS sh<’ sflid soothingly, mg a 2-cent sales tax on a pack-
I know you wouldn’t take any- nge of razor blades
®wav- Mr- Lunt." ’That's the cut F’ather Knicker-
•Take anything!" echoed the booker gets on his blades" said the
actor. Why. there was nothing! fellow, without flicking u
worth taking, anyway—except may- i of his mouth
the realm of playwrights. He pro,
duced it because a friend wonder-
ed if he could. Prior to that time
he liked poetry and wrote it.
Jack McClure, dean of Okla-
homa's writing clan, was his poet
ideal.
It has been a long cry since
the simple creation of "Knives of
Syria" by Riggs He has traveled
the world over in this Interim and
worked at many Jobs.
New York began to tnke note of
him in 1928 He wrote Big Lake”
which was produced there first.
Later came "Clreen Grow the Li-
lacs." then "Cherokee Night." and
now "Russet Mantle." Movie pro-
duction units now ure reading the
"Modem American Poetry."'
critical anthology edited by Louta
untermeyer, is one of the new
books now available at the El
Reno Carnegie library.
This new edition of this "mod-
el of everything an anthology
should be” has been revised com-
pletely. a fuller selection from
the more important poets of the
period lias been made possible by
the omlsssion of 50 lesser poets.
Tills concentration on the out-
standing contributors to modern
poetry and the greater number of
poems printed in each group give
the new volume considerably more
value.
The following American poets
are now more fully represented:
Emily Dickinson, Lizette W
Reese George Sbntayana. Edwin
Arlington Robinson, Amy Lowell
Robert Frost, Carl Sandburg. Va-
LJndsay, Wallace Stevens,
W
4
UiWg r«iwj|l«nk. *r
muscle
be the baking dish!
"Oh. did you like that dish?"
purred Ihe woman, highly flat-
tered. When it turned out that
she. too. prided lierself on her
cooking skill, the two launched In- j '--—
lo an animated discussion of their Mi and u r _____
favorite recipes, ending up by invlt- Oktahon a Cire Huggins of
big each oilier to dinner Oklahoma City
Hmm! Columnists everywhere.
LOCAL BRIEFS
i
were guests
8un-
■ ™.....* «•» — «•««« JS Mt
Riggs, ail inveterate worker, vis-
its Oklahoma only occasionally.
Remains Bachelor
He is not married and only wish-
es he were “three of hlinseif." one
for Santa Pc one for New York
and one for Hollywood.
Among his closest movie colony
friends are Joan Crawford, for
whom he is writing a play; Bette
Davis, for whom he is adapting a
plav. and Predrlc March.
Of the movies he has but little to
say with regard to the uctlng end
“Oh, If
PLOW POINTS
BY TOM MARKS
Coanty Agent at Large
Oklahoma A. and M. College
Extension Service
YOUR GOOD HEALTH
Dr. Chrisman Discusses a Baby’. Sense of Sight,
nearing, Touch and Taste
rlidl
Elinor Wylie. Ezra Pound, T. S.
Eliot. Louis Untermeyer, John
Gould Fletcher, Robinson Jeffers.
John Crowe Ransom, Conrad Aik-
en. Edna St. Vincent Millay
Archibald MacLeish. E. E Cum-
inings, Robert Hillyer, Stephen
Vincent Benet, Hart Crane. Le-
onie Adams. Langston Hughes.
Merrill Moore and Robert Penn
Warren.
A notable feature of the collec-
tion Is that many new poems ap-
pear here for the first time In1
print. 'The preface and notes also
have been greatly amplified and
brought up to date. The preface
constitutes a full history of po-
etry in America from the civil
war to the present day; the notes
are more definitely critical than
before, and in many cases have
been rewritten completely.
The only new contributors to
the volume are Walt Whitman,
whose poems were not before in-
cluded In this
Norman Shows
School Surplu.
NORMAN—(U.P) — A surplus o;
more than $14,000 was noted iir
Ihe city of Norman’s year-end fls
cal report.
The surplus will make possible
reduction of 2 75 mills In the 1938
37 tax levy if the city’s ad va
lorem property valuation remain:
about the same as last year citv
olflcials estimated.
Indications are that this fa
levy reduction will be possible
since ad valorem property valua-
tions certified to county official,
by the state equalization board are
practically the sayie as last, year
The principal reduction probabh
will be in the city sinking fund
which has a surplus of *14.400 03
Look and Learn
1. What animal has such prom
inent eyes that It can see on a I
sides at the same time?
2. Who said. “Give me libert
or give me death?"
3. What does “apocope" mean?
4. Ts a man who deserts fro
the army in time of peace, liabl
to arrest?
5. What city in the U. S cover
the largest area compared wttt
population?
Answers
1. Glrkffe.
2. Patrick Henry.
3. Omlsssion of the last letter
or syllable of a word, as, "I arr
not doin’ anything."
4. Yes, for three years.
5. Los Angeles.
Mr. Untermeyer’s "American Po
etry: Prom the Beginning t
coiWMnn h . , y/hltman '' David McCord. Horae
collection, but In Gregory and James Agee.
Too >
Soon a
By MARJORIE
PEREGRINE
Bride
OTILI.WATER July 27-<Spe- , By CLAUD NORTH CHRISMAN, M.D.
clai.—Any spare time during T, special senses, sight, hear- when they occur I
(HgS Climmoe t» r: ■ “ 1 nO fllllph f a cfn nnA J _ ------* m *
the summer would be a fine time
for building a canyon garden. The
advantages of these gardens are
that they are out of reach of dry-
ing winds, dew settles on the gar-
_ _____ den more, insects do not find the
that particular part came , places so well, and the soil usual-
i Ellison avenue.
VIGNETTE—Tlie scene is the lob-
by of the Metropolitan museum of Mr and Mrs. Walter Puller and
art. Two womT one fmm the ' Sonva Bv,y»- 315 West
south and the other til. watU street, visited over the week-
west. have struck up an'^uaS? I wllh rf“al‘^
lance and are discussing the sights
of New York.
Well, Radio City.” the western-
er is saying, "is not reallv so
terribly exciting. You’ve seen 'it in
pictures and In the movies. you
know, and it looks prettv much as
you thought
But the Bronx goo! Why. I've
been up A
week my dear. I never knew
in Woodward.
Mr and Mrs. J. h Buckles of
Oklahoma City .spent Sunday with
her parents. Mr and Mrs.' F A
Waldo. 1001 South Rock Island ave-
nue.
They
make.
along and I were coerced—then | ly Is deeper and richer*
-......Jr:
He takes the literary end of
movie production quite seriously.
He Is said to be one of the
youngest playwrights
are simple and easy to
You merely dam up a
drain, branch, creek or gully, and
from each end of the dam dig a
ditch with a plow down to the
wdth adaptation of novels"^ STonty rauUon^s^har"*"-
hlduNtrv *,Ud‘°S °f lh,‘ 'nOVle dUch shoul,, not b‘‘ a,low,,d
inaiiNiry. , dPcreM<. ln
Mi mid Mrs W O Crump and
Mi and Mrs. lee Pierce attended
there three time's this Clt.v-8an Antonio
such animalsd||red -,o CHy Sunday aftamoo,,'"
of seeing them!" ... . .. —■;-
• • • wMr and Mrs. Henry C Wolf and
TEAMWORK-Doings of the sum- north of
•ner theatres creep back stendilv U e ^ ^ ^ WW,k
In the regular news bulletins each Mis »!.hi„ „ .
day but not all of the Inn-resting DoLh^i^o^ d,u,Rh"’r M,R*
woodland events receive umw* 'r,?.hv °f Chlcka*ha. and N J
HOLLYWOOD
FILM SHOP
........Tsrjsr, ssr’»?? *»•' ssj-”*
the
to
grade at any place
For this reason these ditches and
| the dam should be laid off with
I a level instrumnt.
The county agent or a 4-H en-
Klneeering club member can do
the work. If the dam can be
made big enough to catch con-
siderable water. Irrigation mav1
J lie had from the pond. If Irrl-1
97 oi o. k31101' lR Intended not less than
u 'a three-lneh pipe should be laid
you are I
mg. touch, taste, and speech de-
velop in the same manner as the
bodily structure. A new born baby
avoids the light and during the
|| first few weeks
strong light is
unpleasant. B y
the sixth or
seventh day the
eyes may follow
a light and he
■ ■ **'4-
HOLLYWOOD, July
Color pictures are causing motion IIV "'Z'Thi' *'\T
picture actors to think seriously I ^ it* d Wh '“
of going to bed with the chickens I ,IMaing 11
The
live in
ters. Acton-
very Jealous
the same household quar- JJJ." pu, ^ Dnn" Bf,||r of Okla-
, - a.
IwpiwH- Amt
R Buckner. 703
avenue, and Mr
East Cav-
Vance,
DOWN MEMORY LANE
a | M _ , JULY 27. 1921
Alv« McDonald of this city
marshal ^ a^Unil«, States
(’ot ti-cui in Ay'lZ- °r,ahom** district before Jinlwe
w,m the
made a number h,s duties and
huska.
Of c. M. Spjker o, tbi. cill ^my^pZ
l-w In-flrn th^KSvillX vvHT.hr<l!1v‘il«,^"■ "l-ak.
inK. took for his suhiect th.. r,d,,fy 1 lhe.r noon meet‘
United States. He characterized °f ’apan nn(l thr
a bogey and •‘menace” as
and the Japanese TK»onl» in i "aM mi8Understood
resented P many '"ntances were misrrn.
were misrep-
uel aStfi&SSSi «,I.nSrdiMr,,S*"'
Bradford motored to Oklahoma City Monday"" Lou,He
A, T,r' Mr»
Muon. Mr. nnd Mr. John r:.ll.^!1, Mr Mra C. A.
.wimminjr party „t Rlu^ l.kr " p,cnlc “nd
Oktahiw. cSr*toSv.J°hn D"Un“ *"■ vlaltora In
altrnd S" AmVlcan^lIi'^nllTtanrr! 0k“r'',"' lMt *vml"K to
In B‘r"M '*^1-* --vrnlnjr for . w«k-» outln*
ardAy'"' E‘h*" A,hl')’ *« *» Oklahoma City vl.ltor y„.
day of the camera's color-
blindness to dark-circled eyes Is
bowing, gradually but inevltablv
to the pink, purple and green of
a new day. bringing with it new
problems to plague photogi aphers.
Make-up men who heretofore
erased the tired lines from ac-
tor’s faces, are helpless. Players,
they say. must get their beauty
sleep.
"No longer ran we hide the
chifcoi! under .sleepy players'
eyes.’ said Mel Berns. chief make-
up man at RKO-Radlo studios
"Color pictures reoulre a lighter
shade of make-up than that used
before Too much greasepaint
make* faces appear flushed and
gives them an unnatural waxiness
"As for red eyes and rosy noses,
they)! he more perceptible ln color
pictures than in person—ma gn I fled
In^slzc and accentuated in color"
Fortunately, early bedtime Is
not expected to be n new hard-
ship. Tlirough inclination and ne-
cessity. 9 o’clock long has been
the curfew hour In Hollywood--
except for a few players who used
lnte hours ns n reducing ngent.
Despite their high salaries, actors
have to be In the film factories
bv 8 o’clock and often earlier
Robert Montgomery says the
camera Is a cruel boss '•He’ll
report It to all the world If
vou've been brenklng the curfew
hours" he said "Apparently other
actors realize this, too I called
Chester Morris Frank Morgan and
Louis Havward at A 45 the other
night for a friendly enrd game
«nd was told they had gone to
bed
* * *
In case you don’t already know.
H D C.'a stands for home dem-
onstration clubs These clubs
may even turn
Its head to do
so
The muscles
that control the
eyes are not
we|j developed
OB. cmisman at birth and
• . . the e y e s may
roll around In a distressing fash-
ion. They may even appear cross-
eyed and wall-eyed. It is not wise
to hold an object directly in front
of the eyes and try to cause the
baby to look at it directly. For the
first few weeks It Is necessary to
keep the baby’s room darkened
and the eyes* protected from strong
light.
At the age of six months, the
Infant Is usually able to recognize
objects. Babies are deaf at birth
and may remain so for several
days. This Is probably due to ab-
uiiAuiiuiin cuius i nese cniDs are sence of air in the miH/U» »<>-
“r”nl^iOnL0f._f.Rrm womp.n. wh? swelling of the mucous membrane
of the nose. This may be due to
meet once or twice a month at
the home of some member or at
h community house and exchange
Ideas, hear and see demonstra-
tions on any and ail classes ofj
homemaking subjects, such as1
rooking, sewing, gardening, flower
crowing home improvement and |
hundreds of other worth while!
things, besides having n nice so-1
ciable time.
Lately they have taken on other
very great thing*, such as build-
ing commt(n*ty houses, putting
in parks, serving hot luncheons In |
schools. Improving school grounds
and fostering and forwarding'other J1 E FARMER EARNS
neighborhood activities BEING ENLARGED PART OF THFrif
Proof that Inoculating soybean <la"1 1
seed gives the plants - •—**— •
itart is seen bv J.
county agent. In the
prolonged labor or some temporary
cause for congestion.
As breathing develops, the swell-
ing disappears, air enters the mid-
dle ear, and hearing sometimes
becomes very acute. The child will
start at the slamming of a door or
e**n slight noises may waken him
from a sound sleep. For this rea-
son It is wise to accustom the baby
to noises from the beginning, so
that noise is not strange to him.
Sounds very soon become fa
when they occur. Do not creep
around and whisper but walk and
talk as usual. By the end of the
second month the baby will turn
his head in the direction of a
sound and in three or four months
will recognize voices. Very loud
noises should always be avoided as
the ears are very sensitive and the
brain may receive a severe shock
from fright.
.. sense of touch la present st
birth, but not well developed ex-
cept in the tongue and lips. The
skin is not very sensitive and any
minor operative procedure may be
undertaken during the first ten
days without an anaesthetic or
pronounced indication of pain.
The forehead and external ear
are more sensitive than other por-
tions of the surface. Perhaps that
Is the reason that children protest
so vigorously against having their
ears wiyshed.
ot taste I* very acute
at birth. According to the experi-
ments of Kussmaul. the ability to
distinguish sweets, sour, and bitter
exist at birth. Sweets cause excit-
ing sucking movements, and bitter
causes grimaces.
Mr E. 8.. Pennsylvania: It would
be impossible to diagnose your ex-
tremely nervous and exhausted
state without seeing you. It is easy
for others to call "lazy” when they
have no conception of what nerves
can do when they go on a ramp-
age. The very hot baths you men-
tion are sometimes quite depleting
In the Orient people sit In bath
kettles over a low fire until the
water reaches the steaming stage
and think it does them good. How-
ever. this sort of treatment should
be left to Institutions where there
Is nursing care and complete rest
to follow. I should say you do need
a specialist who will find the source
of your toxic condition. There ii
Lola Brewster, shanty - town
girl to ln love with Jerry Hughes
but. bacau*e she i* ashamed of
her sordid background, she sends
him away. She obtains a job as
singer with a small-time orches-
tra. but her drunken father tries
to force her out of her Job aa the
tier of starched petticoats, a
bright blue sash encircled her
waist, and a bow. to match the
sash, perched on top of her close-
cropped curls.
Lola felt a momentary panic as
a sea of upturned faces met her
orcheatra b. about to go sn tour. ^ WM°2I^Ui?„1,.^1iLC"ne
Chase Wiley, the leader, to avoid ditty Jeff had^-rtten hi'
rangement. Lola, believing she
has lost Jerry, secretly marries
Chase on this basis, but grows to
hate and fear him. He finally
deserts her. and she gets a tem-
porary job with Jeffrey Vincent’s
orchestra. Meanwhile, Jerry baa
come back into her life*, but she
hasn’t found the courage to tell
him of her marriage.
CHAPTER VIII
miliar to hrlm and he is not startled no wav to estimate the coi
mid helping distressed neighbors JUNIOR fOI I FPF
nnd fosterlnv nnH l ULLLliL
experience j Improvements at the
seem
Okfuskee
when about eleht Inrhe'T ti th"'1 Tw° <,orm,torlM already are un- check here recently.
iJI" ,nchM ta,! ,hpv dpr construction and are expected C. L. Brain, assistant
to be completed about the middle agent, said the farmer^ .slgnedU^*,r
At 35 Clark Gable Is getting to
* a xleepvhemi "I’m Just too
tired to go whoopeelng after work-
in? at the studio all dav" he
MVS. i • yif
Rosalind Russell envies the or-
dlnary working glrl-lnaofar an
sleep Is concerned "I have to
retire much earlier than other
girls, she sava "When the av-
erage working girl arises In the
morning, she takes a quirk tub
dons her make-up, combs her
hair, puts on a dress and la ready
for work within an hour in my
case, to prepare for picture work
I have to set aside at least two
or three hours m the morning to
£n!t ™' make-up. fix my halrdresa
nnd put on a costume ’’
„ *n nclr«w who la not worried
mer sleeping demands of the color
"I HkM d,,"nptte MacDonald.
1 like to sleep eight or
hours, auyhow/ she insists.
nine
l>e<ran to bloom
noVlccd^'rf hnfrnf^rv'n!i<i*rt *** ' °f , 8ePt',mbpr. President John
noticed tnnt Inoculated beans Holcomb said
ZZ,-Z SFSnJTwEi0”! bHn,|»
_____ hi*
p, | name 10 times to get the check
and then was to give one fourth of
to hi* landlord If It hadn't
= SAS.-« ;»'»irr.s
* * * right grant of 55 percent of the ithp problem of dividing
Nlne-venr-old Avnnel Eubanks In C0Sf thp building*, and the
the Prvor —•*- ~.. . . nialnder was obtained tliroiiMh
HL re- J rnon*>'
4-H club. Plttsburgh ,:”:“,“r,A.^ 0b,alnpd Uie| The check *“
routnty. cheered up Martha Jane j f “ d
O DonW, assistant home dem-i. T*° npw wln*» 4® the admlnls-
onstration agent, a lot recently tratlon building will provide new
when she reported that she had t,uartrri for biology, home econom-
for ont cent.
been ennnlnc beeU. pickles Eng- IS? ftnd commercial departments.!
lish pens and bean*. although ,he wln»a aw* expected to be corn-
many 4-H club girl* had been un-1 b,*f0IT October.
able to fill their canning requ|rP. | ---—
nl *’ because „f dllcd up
dens.
Avanel
Daily Lesson
In English
_. cen use the pressure
cooker as efficient Iv as msnv older
l>er*ons nnd her canned goods are
? I?.1!? ,QU""ty 8hp "bm I* In.
^ln«’ f00d orepsm.
rb work lmprOVPrT’Pn' 4-«
A Problem A Day
Paul
farmer.
* * *
Rech. Cherokee emintv
dx vears ago earned *]oo
bv wrapping green tomatoes m
Texas. He Invested It in
smooth-mouth brood mares
to the present time has
*375 worth of
"till has his
young stock and
. . I*0 mare* and *450
Tl u.h .of ",ock on hand, relates
V 'l.m 1ST- Ch"”*“ «—
By trading, Kech got a brood
How far Is It from first base to
third base on a baseball diamond?
•A baseball diamond Is 90 ft
square).
Answer lo Sunday's Problem
fl« ft. Explanation—Multiply 44
by 3 and divide by 2.
Mr. • and Mrs. Qllbert Oruewcll
of Oklahoma City visited Sunday
afternoon with her cousin. Mis.
Oar! McCain, and Mr. McCain,
202 North Bickford avenue.
sow nnd two white-faced heifers,
and from his original |loo ha*
made almost, «1,U0U in gta >e«a.
WORD8 OFTEN MISUSED: Do
not say, "Four and three la seven."
Say. are seven"; there are two
subject noun*. "Four plus three
I* seven" Is correct, four being
the singular subject.
O F T F N MISPRONOUNCED
Supple. Pronounce the u aa in
sup, not soup.
OFTEN MISSPELLED:
el. Buckle; le.
SYNONYMS: Comfort
cheer, solace, console
enliven.
WORD STUDY: "Use a wort
three times and it Is your*." Let
us increase our vocabulary by max>
tertng one word each day. Today’s
word: AUOMENT, to increase In
Mn>. amount or d<«ree.
tlence augments an evil.
Lola. And the crowd announced
Its pleasure wtih cheers and a
steady clapping of hands. Lola
bowed and had to sing again and
again.
When she escaped the platform,
sne hurried to her dressing room
A girl with a mop of defiant black
curls stood waiting outside the
door.
Bh« held out her hand. "Con-
gratulations. Miss Brewster! You
DEAR JERRY! The note she STAg!*”&£*£*£!£
had sent by special mes- WeU wish me luck. 1 have to go
senger to tell him of her ar- onH{!?w4’. „„ ^ ,
rival had scarcely been gone time to further thJfr Scqu^unw
an hour, and here were the but they were to meet daily at
biggest, reddest blooms ln all th*lr worlt in the months to come.
Chicago to tell Lola he loved a ,fro»ty gown of white se-
her qulni’ Lola “"t half a dozen
t.w v,„a » ^ w numbers during the evening. Each
Jeff had warned Lola he appearance was the signal for an
would be busy for the next lowers began to swamp
two days, attending to the af- „r,m«an?^,,)df bParln« the names
lal„ or the orchestra. '’'B”r»'!5>„U,LS.";en h„
After that. I’ll look out for room for a taxi home, the onlv
you,” he promised. basket of American Beauties was
Tw. .hole da,,. Lol. broke Xto£> StJSn
me a" t^'tjke Jhe/1* runner ™ •“““ - 82
ing. had been detained by busi-
ness. But he’d been precious.
aaiA-atf »• ar^-urSirSw
Nickel;
(verb),
encourage.
"Imps-
risr2
•nie Introduction of Lola to of love
Chicago comprised the celebra- Lola pressed her f«r* .
SS-SS
dined in a SwedUh place. The hmel PP^ front of th*
second day's fun included a ride
Lola Vrew” t°lred>Poff riding,Wtbey A8 stepped from the ele-
walked along the lake shore. t J*110 the upstairs lounge.
They came back to Lola's hotel 1 she was the happiest girl
late. In a taxi. Jerry put his arm ISi Iv* wor‘0- She crossed the
about her. and Lola rested her 5,Plc*ly carpPtrd floor. holding the
head on his shoulder. nowers close. And then it hap-
Lola mustered her courage ...
Now was the time to tell him the 2 ram“'*r figure unfolded from
truth. Now was the time to tell f„d*ep chalr L®l* stifled a desire
him she was married. She felt ..™!artV „
sick and cold. „ c.haaf! How dare you come
The taxi, caught ln a traffic ?itd
Jam. stopped. The shrill cry of a „„ Uarp? Chase lifted one thin,
newsboy came In the window. braw- ‘ Dare, my dear? ■
All about de big Hollywood word to use to
divorce!" Jour husband ' I m broke, my love •
Jerry hugged her closer. T andn*?d • pl*ce to stay."
don’t believe In divorce, do you?" „ B«ke? Chase, what’s hap- u
he said. "A marriage vow to a 10 orchestra?"
sacred pledge-forever.” . CLhaa« «hrugged. * Busted Oone
Lola grew wretched. Perhape L.“*vaal • Job for two
she could get a divorce quietv. ”1?°, , U R weren't for my suc-
Perhaps, If Jerry didn’t know un- *lf*- £’d *>« on m.v upper*"
H* It was all over, he might for- . hut hp.r fighting the
give her. Whatever happened, she tarror. that overcame her
couldn't tell him now. J*1®1** drew herself up and
_ f»ced Chase WUey.
JEFF routed her out of bed the not nolng to continue the
next morning with a vigorous c?u a marriage,
dng of the telephone bell, unasr. I m going to get a divorce."
• Hurry Into your clothes and ,n.T.i ^r!1 ln her fac« “A di-
meet me ln the lobby." ^ u out ot Jour mind.
Half an hour later, she was sit- . v0Ve'
ting beside him on one of the c*n t stop me!”
hotel’s big divans. *«£ Ip*«l guardian. Inla
“You get a break, kid," he began 7 ,Dld you fV®r "top
at once. "And I'm glad of tt. vlnthal KPould do to Jeff
Whpn we open, you are singing »mi.rei-nRnt®d char»« hhn
with the band! Monta Lee IsnT mlat<waUng you?”
coming back. She's married t-u.TT1 J?^dn t. dar*' « isn’t
Quit.” *™*' Terror stole into Lola's
Lola oould scarcely believe her V k
earn. Wiley shrugged. "So you say *•
‘ Are you trying to tell me I’m a",w®rpd "But If I bung
going to take her place?" ;.th® newspapers will think
Jet slapped hi* knee*. "That’s ^,7® wh«r °»inhtlL front paH, s
It I inen what will become of your
Lola said. "1 could hug you." ™f„carpp[’ And Jeff Vincent?"
Jeff looked around ln mock ,.v bo**tl" Lola
moca You beast!**
"Spare the
advised her.
moaned.
alarm. "Dont try It, kTd. Thlsta0!!
fnghtfully respectable hotel." . i*P***. the Invective." chase
**®“*ff hT Get down to brau
T® fir»t night of the orohss- Hj°k*' H.ow J®uch are you willing
* tra’s engagement at the supper 10 fcprp m° out «f your
club arrived. Jeff had decided to 7?
Introduce Lola In a Juvenile tons . -
She dressed for the part meeting (To ** continued)
her audience for the first urns in .k»
,r4* -SF* «
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Dyer, Ray J. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 45, No. 125, Ed. 1 Monday, July 27, 1936, newspaper, July 27, 1936; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc919234/m1/4/: accessed May 2, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.