Bristow Daily Record (Bristow, Okla.), Vol. 19, No. 63, Ed. 1 Friday, July 5, 1940 Page: 4 of 6
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1111:1110NE 52-ALI DEPARTMENTS -
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11)16tiorna I oticf Ad of March 3 'NAL
siiNloPit op 'no ASSIOCIATFli
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si Il Mi rif it Al Etst 111 M i
t'A AMT IN AM AN1'
In IMO 11011511 nUt of Stiiie
(Lute jlpr $4 tloe l tar 19 MP
nth JAM :MI Month' COO
More Mosotho 111 I hoer Months
mot fololo'h 64 Or iIopliIi
Vc I ILN 3 member of a clitireli congregItion
raesnis titurdi a time signit thc
hcv ken 'wonkier oeen pre3ch-
ant co Itiog 7ernioni
County Business -
CRVLK (XMINTY citizens are going to de
fide an impottain busineS5 iihitter July 9 Un-
fortunately there is a possibility the decision
of the eiti?ens w ill be based on politics or prej
udices r1LIn r than on the merits of the issues
county of ours has an estimated value
of more dim 30 million dollars Its govern
fount eo!s in excess of half a million cacti yelr
t the public affairs' are in the hands of
the hoard of county commissioners It is highly
impoitant men be selected for these offices who
have sonte background and record Of success in
their own affairs
Should we employ managers of the county
business on the basis of selfishness or because
some one is promised a job dragging aroad
or because the candidate can promise the
most in the way of pap to individuals or groups?
shoold not
If there ever was a time when voters should
It the field of candidates for county com-
misionei and F deft nten best qualified for the
jab now the time lklost of our voters know
the canddses know their respective qualifica-
tions aid cold" easily pick the best equipped
tng thul or the job We !lope they
IL is Iti!!li tette Creek county got down to earth
in the t:iat al of county government
Notice to Travelers
MANY WILL in train tripS this year
and find a new deal in Red Cap service in rail-
road terminals In the past a traveler tipped the
Red Cap according to the dictates of his own
conscience and Often a Red Cap
7
ouki tote four or five packages anti s grips for
3 passenger only to be rewarded by a !tickle or
dime tip "But them days is gone forever"
Under the wage and hour law the terminal
companies were ordered to guarantee the Red
Cap the minimum hourly wage In order to
insure a daily income sufficient to meet this
minimum requirement the railroads fixed tfie
of 10 cents per parcel or grip is the
charge for Red Cap senice
So if you are traveling this year for the first
time under the wage and hour regime be pre
pared to pay at least a dime for each piece of
luggage the Red Cap handles for you
mhmo410
V
YfS1!:flt) y t
14 III 1 P1111 01 AO
101 I:le 41111) tett J:0y tht:t the
ttqhe's tire to he tiftell ter rftws
tot us then
npany Chapter 10
- - Bridge Party
limn
- 1N IIOUB or so later and
I I stood iind looked down from l
the edge of the gulley the blaeltf
r""1""Y flied twisted ruin that had been
her Ford conjai It had nosed down
IENTS
and lay canted on its side hot the
way its top was crushed indicated
7 MI lin't"' that it must have turned OVt r at
!uat 011ee
ss
for Pub-
"Five cents tor junk" said Fe-
' Inn uihrripu -liria morosely !And I only had
liability insurance May be the
widow and orphans cao collect on
Shoe that I'd finished paying for it too
" "" --laSt month Oh wt II I've still
2PS got my girdle" And She patted her
- sleek side -
Gerald Beaufort hint somehow
- insinuated himself into the rumble
mg re pt ion
seat of Adam's modestly correct
the new Buick Ile seemed pleased
with the expedition like a child
At a picnic and hovered cheerful-
ly over the two in Adam had de-
tailed to do the actual sitting and
presently was down on his immac-
ulate gray-flannel knees lingering
the small bits of blackened debris
ahog to tie- that made a growing la imp to one
side of the workingmen
lily 9 Un- There were shirt buttons and
rte dcision buttons from a man's coat There
WaS a belt buckle which looked
iesi or prej- like any other belt buckle I had
ever seen but which was scruti-
tile issuas nized gravely by Adam and Ger-
iated value aid before it was placed in an en-
velope in true professional style
Its govern- Tito cutT links turnm out to bt the !
yell' patented kind that snap together
r and WPIT as distinctive Adam said
e hands of disgustedly as carpet tacks -
It is highly "Any idea what this is?" he
asked holding something up for
offices who us to see
success ill we scrambled down to him and
Felicia took the oddly shaped bit
of metal from his hand She
t count rubbed it with her handkerchief
v
turned it this way and that said
or because finally "Yes its the clasp of my
pocketbook He took a fancy to it
ng a roau and as it was an old one and had
unitise the only a few dollars in it I decided
9 not to quibble"
or groups
"That was big of you" said Ger-
aldBeaufort admiringly
"I thought So" Sho turned the
ters should blackened clasp over hi her hand
aunty corn- t "I shall keep it" she decided "for
a souvenir"
ied for the The luggage comparttnent was
sy open Adam
'me" know V:111111''g i ap'it1ttli- lever anion!! the
e qual ifica- spined tools and prying it vider
t equqwed stuck hi 11ead ostrich-fashion
onto the bs i avic maw
they w "A flash is what I need" he
saio ms voice sounding
lo hollow
it to cart' q j "
r e s
s ome ung m lore I he
straightened singled the Engliah-
man vitt' his eye "There's one in
my car Dash compartnumt"
His handsome face alight Vi'ith
boy scout enthusiasm Gerald
fwet iyeat Beaufort scrambled up to tho car
By the time lie returned Adam
'ice in rail- had managed to force the com
partment almost wide open and
q'peu
t the the four Of us crowded around to
of his oWn see what lay in the light of the
flash Charred but the ash re-
a Red Cap taining its shape against the hellgi-ips
for zontal metal wall of the car Were
the remains of a small pasteboard
a !tickle or bux
orever" "Yours Felicia?" Adam asked
She shook her head but looked
lie terminal apprehensive "Never saw it be-
ee the Red fore What do you suppose it is?"
Adorn reached a long arm down
n order to and touched the lid gingerly It
o meet this powdered under his finger The
aperture which it left revealed
s fixed the that the box was packed with
something grayish green and lex-
gni) 3S the tured like paper and we stared at
it for a moment before Gerald
I or the first 11 iitafpo('n'tmey
me be pre 'la other words jack" said
r Felicia on a long breath "And it's
di piece alt 41shes"
oti Adam stare' at it silently far a
Iting minute then filched oil' the
'OPIONENO tight
"I'm not goinrt to touch it" ho
It a of I ell yeirs or& u0I'llhave them send out
air bu corporal och e of the Detec-
tive Bureau of the State roliee Ile
may be interested in this"
ceralii looked dis-ippointed
"Couldn't WI' iwt open it tin a bit?
A few minor burns several arrests for too
mean to say it s not often one
boisterous celebration innumerable outings scos a tidy hit of enAl Eke that ail
gone up in smoke"
hundieds of pleasure hunters much noise and Aton shook his tin-
I
boiling heat was the Fourth of July in Bristow tit O'Connor conies t 0 id
careful handline to identi require
fy it at
WaNliingloo—A grim determined and an ait Dell have the tlininnent"
but hopeless battle against the ratification Of Tito fitimerman'
the London naval treaty will begin on Monday E FORCED the back of the
comNirtm ent nearly shu t Ind
II) the senate turned to the soldier Nilo had ap-
Rev J D Harmon will preach his farewell !mired at his elbow
r:'sSomethLtir here you trtioht like
sermon at the Clmrch of God Sunday night t
sir he sant breathing a
bringioz to 3 dose five and a half years pas- little unevenly Ile looked Urt-
kippy Ito held somothrut out on
torite the palin of his band for Adam to
- AND 18 YEARS AGO take "We've only juA found it
sir"
Sidewalk throughout the entire central part Adam look ed at the small
of Bristow is to be completed along the lines sabers with the nunber
above them and tician N
stiggeqed by the government postai inspector 41fway httvn Ii trelli
Who recommended tity mail delivery for this 1ot anothcr envelope from the
breitq pocket of his khaki Fhirt
city lzeelmental In t Jwt
Ilardin is the name of the new town being ! bulore" ho and dr(Tpca it in
Ile pocketed the (UV( ))at held
pi emoted at the poor farm where oil drilling -- -
-
t - 1 -
activity is pro ing The poor (arta pot' was N" "1"—N" uhkke"
mEmPliK Troll Lt!i - t hi the
- discovered on the day of I lartrin g s ewe t ton in
thIY- tt full !Aomacit is a good
November 1922 - Inceitilve ta thal-ae ter buildina 1
"Tile Voice o2 Creek County'
easual Slaughters
gmm By VI It GiNik HANSON i"
I
- l‘lf:NIPIIK Troll fi'i -Ain the
n throly a fun s'olliat'il is a good
1mA:wive IJ claulicter buililuAL
SOS0040401007Niel
out a rand to me to help nie
out of the
"Not touch of a haul was it?" I
hurrying to keep up N 11
as he strode tWk ard the car The
other -two were still scrambling
out of the gulliy
"It kn't sr) much what we found
that interests me as what we
didn't find" he said cryptically
there's Immerman who did
not return to barracks A small
man hrunerman's build A regi
mental insignia Next step" he
finished handing me into thr car
"next step find Immerman if Im
merman in be found"
The bridge club met that after-
noon I don't believe there was a
woman except the cook left in any
of the quarters along Officers'
flow-1 know &'elicia had to send
out for more tables and the very
walls of the lounge seetned to
shudder at the incessant clacking
of tongues The gentlemen on
those - walls looked remote and
long suffering as if they would
have given much to be elsewhere
I had not intended to be pres
(fit but Julia stopped in early and
imasted And I was not sorry of a
chance to see more of Sandra
Others were there for the same
reason Between that and an al-
most ghoulish interest in the
chaplain's mishap and the theft
and burning of Felicia's car there
was some haphazard bridgf
played
Late in the afternoon Mitri
Pennant Sandra and I chanced to
be at the same table Sandra
played all four hands lter part-
nen one of those women wilt
seem to feel that the mission ol
dummy is to enliven the party
pounced On me at once to demand
an eye-witness account of the
chaplain and his poison oak leaf
I complied briefly for I had by
now told it so often that the sub
ject had lost its charm
only long enough to -bid and lay
down her hand Sandra listened
with courteous it as she
raked in trick after trick
Mimi's eyes met mine in quiet
amusement across the table
"Sandra my dear don't you
ever lead trumps'?" she asked at
the close of the hand s
Sandra smiled apologetically
suppose I should but I never go
by rules I just play the way I
happen to feel at the moment
"Well with your score you
don't need me to tell you how to
play bridge" Mimi said ruefully
"I think Pm headed for the booby
prize"
"Oh I'm just awfully lucky"
Sandra disclaimed modestly but
she looked rather complacent and
I thought she doesn't really be-
lieve that She doesn't see half
the chances she takes—she thinks
its skill -
She and her partner rose the
richer bra stupendous score and
progressed to the next table The
table below us was still in play
and for the moment Mimi Pen-
nant and I were alone
They sav in the army that there
bt no rank among women:- what
they mean is that there should be
no rank among women But of
course there is Living as they da
with official ties so inextricably
bound up with social ties how
can anyone doubt that the wife of
the commanding officer will re
ciiive deference which may not be
due either to her years or her per-
sonal merit?
Mimi Pennant vas a young wo-
man and a beauty Men would
find no difficulty in paying het
homage But what of the women?
Women older plainer longer in
the serviee yet foreed by expedi
uney if by no written regulation
to defer to her because her bus
hand Nvas senior to theirs
Wouldn't resentment be human?
Might not the smiling faces that
everywhere surrounded her be
merely masks for acute dislike?
But I had detected no such dis
like She seemed genuinely liked:
And looking at her now at the
wistful friendliness of her smile
I had a clue to that liking Mimi
vas not impressed with herself
"I wish you'd come and see me
sometime1 she said 'Soon Julia
has been singing your praises but
don't let her monopolize yule"
"I like Julia"
"So do 1 Believe it or not"
She smiled again but I saw the
shadow on her file° the swift
trouble in her violet-gray eyes:
saw too that she was lonely with
the loneliness of one who is fIght-
ing a losing battle alone
Ti be continued
Bristow Daily Record
i1111111001IWOfty
EDITOItUL PAGE --
!I
ft113 n LI
Of The Day
1 hAn Alaa taw Cpas tosI
Dpeorat've :et itiu v 1 p I r
btit wcather (mitt rimre aimciiliog
1
Lim F
it or 1)ittrier
1
I Menu Serving 2 (Jr 2
LLand itriii i'Arill i'Oalet
11141 tt rrit Veas a mil 4 'ir1I
it'd iitOt itiiiS tti Ir' Jaw
itiiiiitiott Ii4:iiiii
$111111r It a vti i 1 P1811
A ilo-I l'-0 cake
Lamb Valk
I t)olitiii tiooiitIt :: iitii-gifiitiiib
iti Mb iiiiti
Iri letitiiit Fait 4 II Ii10111S
1 1-:1!411 fat
ch(1)1 I I $111 iliAt1l11e
Iamb
leaipiaa Fait 4 II -pimps
rdt
eho11 i1 I 04t11J1Je
rShY
pup it
MiX 13Mb S3It parsley erundts
and milk Shape into Pi! leen
balls Brown Weil in heatt-ct tat
Cover lower the- heat dnd cook
15 minutes: Inspect frequently
and turn to allow even cooking
Add jelly and cook tkVo S
Quickly transfer to a heated “tv
ing plattor and Stir rOtital wit!!
buttered peas and carrots
he Box Rolls- -
eake iNaw ti aro
preied yaFt hied
eap lakewarin
Wiler -
lip rh1 I clip tirh1
water
earl fat
(part hailer) 5 raps
tenspiain Fait :Iloilo I
Crumble yeast in a large-sized
howl add lukewarm walrr and
mix well Mix cold water fat
salt and sugar Bring in boiling
point and cool to lukewarm be-
fore pouring into vest Adti
potatoes and two cups or flour:
Beat three minutes Add flour
slowly until a soft dough forms
Knead three minutes place in a
greased bowl Cover lightly and
let rise until doubled in bulk
Punch down a little cover with
waxed paper and a lid and store
in the refrigerator It will keep
a week
An Old Friend -' let rise until CI DUMP(' in oink
cANDRA listened politely then Punch down a little cover with 1
waxed paper and a lid and store 1
Li informed us that $he had in the refrigerator It will keep
known Chaplain Henry in Texas a week -
"Mimi and I went to the hos
pital to see him this morning I
hadn't heard that he was coming ----------- - - - -- - — - -----
here and I was so delighted that : "Ititall'aureers" ai'e zomething
the chaplain who is going to nlar '
ry us should prove to be an old new 'for your next picnic Make
friend" your usual ha-11 When It's crus-
proves b"I hope fore the wedding" Mimi his appearance im ty underneath scoop up- portions
e -
said practically "I'd as soon think and quickly fit them into toasted
of being married by a prize fight- buns that have been partially
er oally who had just lost a big tight split Tuck in thin Etrip s of clill
It he is a sight!"
''Oh but he'll be over it by pickles ' and watch the "picnic-
then" Sandra said confidently eeri" 14o after thcm
"He's not bad looking normally
but 'rather shy with women I
suppose that why he's still a
bachelor" The utlidies department of the
The lady on my left launched Universi'y of Oklahoma has be-
enthusiastically into an account of gun an extensive survey or -'oymilitary
weddings sha had seen a Oral equipment 1lhe survey is
reedit' which she interrupted
only long enough to -bid and lay part C a gimeral irTntary be-
down her !void Sandva listened Mg— taken- at all state in:Hutton
wiakth d courteous attention as she und2r provhions of a measure en-
ro in trick after trick
rktimi'1 I'VOC tript runf in niiglt avted ay la year'zi loislaturo
By JACK STINNETT
- WASHINGTON — This is
the story of two young melt
who have More 4 'tekphone
numbers" than any young
men I ever heard of
The young men are L W Law-
de and Edwin Rice a couple of
Washington boys who surely did
make good with the national Juf
-nior Chamber of Commerce
' Hee's how it was: The Jaycees
as they have copyrighted them-
selves decided to hold their
convention in Washington The
only checkrein oil success of pre-
vious conventions was a dearth of
dates So the national president of
these young business men over-
flowing with civic exuberance ap-
pointed Lawder and Rice to do
something about dates
As Lawder puts it: "It was up
to us to see that no man came to
the convention wanting a date for
the social events who couldn't get
one And man was that an as
signmentl"
Well it could only happen here
There's probably not another city
in the United States—not even
Hollywood—where you could get
a thousand girls to volunteer for
blind dates If it hadn't boon for
the ingenuity of Lawder Rice &
Co it probably couldn't even
have been done here in spite
Of the fact that Washington has
a greater surplus of women than
any other town in the country
Even in Washington where there
are thousands of female govern-
ment clerks stenographers et al
you can't just pull blind dates out
of the hat
I had a due to that liking 1titni
vas not impressed with herself Fl s o
ow To Do It
"I wish voted come and see me I I ERE'S the way It 'as done
somolitne1 she said 'Soon Julia 11 w or ding to Lawder (just in
has been singing your praises but case you are having a convention
(on't lot her monopolize you" for young men only and want a
"I like Jul'' hint):
"So do I Believe it or not 'Ed and I spent a couple of
She smiled again but I saw the months trying to work out a phti
shadow on her foe° the swift that wouM get results Finally we
trouble in her violet-gray eyes: sat down and made a list of all
'1v too that EhP was lohelY with I the girls we knew and all the
the lunelin qg of one who is fight- girls our friends knew who might
lug a losing battle alone be eligible for blind dates
Ti be continued "When we got through we had
- a it of 60 girls We invited all
--
the Character Builder Bible Class these girls- to a party and put our
problem in their hands There
gave Mar menther7getters a hied i wasnt a one who let 114 down
chicken dinner' Those whose en- They wtint out and sulanted the
rollment 1161s woe alim gut beans
Dr LuxE
--
If heay cilarn iii not whip
caily add un e4g while fur each ' 1 1 - A I A
OPk kril
cup of erfarn chill fuee I t iller and - v bOU le iLs a A i iii'— itta tig
IA-
then licat villi a cold beater This I
i ------ By George Techer—
is u iunik Ellt! fill
so itE TOOK IIES 'f1lE31 B
AND 1 ENT TO COLLEGE
NICEOLASVILLE
For four yearstchn William Wil-
kir:cn 1940 Un:er1y of Ken-
tneky gradace who live' on a
faint near here hiteh-bikt-Llf:()
miles daily to get to classes at
Lnington and bark home
iiiLL U(lt h Willi
I Never cnee he ays (lid he
Is pay bm fare
d Ile sullnrElli7P'"
iy Afiln covered by 'LlItt111)---25-
in' !'t-10
1 Averag'1! oa(1-1:
—15 13 20 in'!11
Hides cual: cd ier w1n volt ear-
1 rv
The utilities department of the A lone motori t h a aciml prcs-
to give a lift
knew
plaT to LAT
on a
1
AfiWashingtonDayboolsto
aid of all their friends and when
the list was in ve had more than
500 girls who were willing to
pitch in and make the Jaycee
convention a success
"That was Swell but that wasn't
half enough so we turned next tu
the social organizations in the va-
rious departments We went be-
fore their mwetings explained
what we were up against and
asked fur volunteers That way
P got 500 more girls
"Every one of these filled our
cards listing their ages heights
weights coloring (blonde or bru-
n(tte) their home towns and in
many cases their preference in
types of men
"In two nights we have Mled
dates fur 925 'men Those were for
the dance one night and the boat
ride 01 the Potomac the next
night And the only complaints
we have had are that some girls
were too tall or too short too
chtmky or too thin Maybe its
strange but we haven't had a
complaint yet from any girl
Guess that speaks pretty well for
the Jaycees doesn't it?"
0 0 I
Few Compinint4
IrE114 that's the story and in
1 the midd of var and world
confusion some sort of conclu-
sions should be drawn about the
American way of life
I at in the Junior Chamber
convention's "date bureau" in the
IVIayfloer for a couple of hours
and listened to the applicants and
complainants The latter were
very few the former very nu-
merous in suite of the fact that
more than tio0 already had been
dated up for two big social events
Here's one from Mobile Ala
that was typical: "Boy that lit-
tle girl you fixed me up with last
night was sure a lamb Boy was
slui sweet How about doing as
well by me tonight?"
°If she was tirt eI right why
didn't you get another date with
her tonightr
'Look hcre man I can't go talc-
in g chances like that Two dates
with a girl like that and I'd be
getting serious No sir man gut
me another date tonight and if
she ain't as mull as that bahe last
night it'll be all right with me
INtowl I can't lake chances like
that every Plithi
By GEORGE TUCKER
N EW YORK — There is I
believe the root of a ser-
mon or an editorial in this
scrap of conversation Carl
Erbe and this reporter overheard
it the other night at the Riviera-
bar It was between shows
It was about II o'clock in the
night Four or five men two
of them obviously of Spanish an-
cestry were in a little cluster at-
one end of the bar talking -
This is what I mean" one of
them said gesturing with his free:
hand to the crowd "Look at
those peopl e They are well
dressed They are happy They
drove out here in theft own auto
mobiles The same is true not
only in New York but hi other
sections of this country Your
standard of living is so much
higher than ours Yet my coun-
try has many natural resources
too Why have you progressed so
far beyond us?'
For a moment for just one lit-
tle moment there was one of
those infinitesimal fractions of
silence that sometimes can seem
an eternity then came the an-
swer "Two or three hundred years
ago" his companion replied "the
Spaniards landed on your shores
looking for gold About the
same time a handful of Puritans
landed on these shores looking
for God"
Later in the evening Erb e and
went back to the clitt-side of
the Riviera to renew our ac-
quaintance with a family of rac-
coons that comes each year to be
fed on the rocks by the river
when the Riviera npen s This
night club you will remember
is on the rim of the Palisades
overlooking he Hudson There is
a drop of a hundred feet Or more
to the water's edge arock V
That's the way to starve they
say That's the way to see uncer-
tainty and poor food and ince-
ular hours destroy looks and
weaken self-confidence
"We don't want any more ex
tras" says Howard R Philbrick
new (Intl of Central Casting “We
already have 7000 and that's far
too many Our aim is to whittle
that group clown not to admit
new extras"
All extras must be members of
the Screen Actors Guild Pros-
pective members must show they
can fill a real need or serve a
definite purpose Usually too
they must bear recommundations
from members
In other words the would-be
extra faces the problem of many
a would-be anything else—the
closed shop
A FRAGE Income for the MI-
lywood extra Led year was
around $116 Only 70 nut of 'LOW
made $2000 or more During this
January there were fewer jobs
than for any month since 11135
The calls for extras during the
first four months of 1940 were
fewer by 2t10eid than during the
bame period in 111311 and the in-
come $300000 less
Extras who get the most work
---- -
- 1 7 I
el
‘4'4
fre
—4- Ldvskt7-
Ar
ga3
densely shrubbed Iioreline Each
year a do-ren or more raccoons
"miraculously vppear to bask in
the glow of the colored lights ae-
cooling food from the hands of
the guest S The waiters have
them all named They have been
there for years' and eachsum-
mer when Ben Niarden returns
with this staff of waiters to the
Riviera the boys ascertain
whether those raceixins are there
even before their luggage is Un-
packed In the daytime you
could search for hours and nevet
find -One and a:you did find
one he Nv o u Id run away from you
But when night COMPS and
the lights wink on they lose their
fear and come out of hiding to
enjoy the music and the free
handouts It is a phenomenon of
nature thA could only happen in
the environs of a great metropolis
Carl Erbe himself is one of
those peculiar and often inexpli-
cable parts that go to make up
the world we call Broadway
lie used to be a hobo For
awhile he was a guide in Yel-
lowstone National Dark lie
has thirsted in the wide deserts
of Mexico and lingered at side
walk cafe tables in what used to
be Paris A couple of years
ago he invited me to take the in-
landiwaterway route with him to
the Florida keys lie had a
fine boat couldn't make it
and he set out alone with his dog
A couple of days out his boat
suddenly s a n k and he floated
with his dog a toy wirehair
- named Punchy for what to him
is still an eternity But he
wasn't going to desert Punchy in
an extremity like that Final-
ly he was rescued And to-
day among his mo1 pi?ed pos-
sessions is a medal gi Von him in
recognition of the tact that he
risked his own life to sive that
of his doq
HOLLYIV001 SOUNDS
t7ernon itoautao Cconr has written
three stories tot the life vl the Hollywood ettras This is the first:
H OLLYWOOD—So you want to he an extra in the movies
where some big director can single you out of the mob
and make you a top-salaricd star?
Take it from the men and women who are txtras—that's
not the way to crash the movies 4-
are those who have the largest
wardrobes WOMert say that a
wardrobe costing from $1000 to
$1000 is necessary
Those who work in mob scenes
get $550 a day In party Kew's—
infortnal dross—they get $11 For
evening clothes it's $1650 The
few who speak a line or two get
$25
Few extras have worked up in
to featured roles and a very very
few have become stars Gary
Cooper once VW4 an extra so was
the late lean Barlow I‘Iost Stars
have entered the films from the
stage or radio or little theater
a
TIIE extras part is invariably
I tediously small and the Ivork
is ropetitious—a dozen "takes"
may he shot of the same small
seene If the extra tries to make
himself noticed by pushing him-
self forward he usuallY ends up
with less work Audiences might
recognize him in another uncon-
nected scene so the director
makes it a point to leave hint out
(Jr the ii1(litional shots
Says Brooks Benedict one-
the? film heavy now an extra:
"We're in the most uncertain
shakiest business in the world
People don't pay much attention
to us—but when thy do boy art
we gratefull"
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Bristow Daily Record
- F1'itlas1'Tuly 5 19-10 -: vi: -
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Nichols, L. M. Bristow Daily Record (Bristow, Okla.), Vol. 19, No. 63, Ed. 1 Friday, July 5, 1940, newspaper, July 5, 1940; Bristow, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2088081/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.