The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, August 26, 1937, Image 7

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STAR
DUST
Movie » Radio
*
%%%k By VIRGINIA VALE dk
O GREAT has been the suc-
cess of “A Star Is Born,”
all the Hollywood studios are
busy making pictures concern-
ing the private lives of film
stars. Just copy cats, that’s
what the film producers are.
20 2 20 20 20 20 0 26 4 4 2
32020 2% 3 26 2 2% 2 4 2%
reach the screen is ‘‘Hollywood
Cowboy” with George O’Brien as
the star and it is a very enter-
taining Western.
of them all is
boasts Leslie Howard
Blondell in the cast.
“Stand In" which
in which Nino Martini lifts his voice
in song, and the biggest novelty is
Grand National's ‘‘Something to
Sing About.”
ante YR
Divorces don't interfere with busi-
ness judgment in Hollywood. For
instance, when Wil-
liam Wyler was
asked what player
he would like to
have in the leading
role of ‘“‘Having a
Wonderful Time’ he
said that only Mar-
garet Sullavan, his
ex - wife, had the
beauty and acting
skill required for the
role. Up spoke Hen-
ry Fonda, another
ex-husband of Mar-
garet’s, to say that
he would like to play opposite her.
So, just to complete the cycle, they
telephoned her present husband, Le-
land Hayward, who is her manager,
and asked him if she would be free
to make the picture before going
back to New York for stage ene
gagements and he said he would be
happy to arrange it.
amen fn
“The Toast of New York" star-
.
Margaret
Sullavan
ing picture. It deals with the piec-
turesque period when Jim Fisk was
becoming a big shot in Wall Street,
when business men went around
brandishing buggy whips when they
weren't conniving to get control of
a railroad, or wreck each other's
fortunes.
Pe
All over the country box-office
records are being broken by ‘‘Sara-
toga,” the picture on which Jean
Harlow was working at the time of
her tragic death. Her fans would
be happier, I think, to see one of
her old pictures again, a gay, light-
hearted picture like ‘Bombshell’ or
“Reckless,” for in ‘‘Saratoga’ she
is but a pallid shadow of her former
self.
wn Won
After arguing for weeks about her
salary demands, RKO have at last
signed Ruby Keeler to make two
pictures a year for them. She won't
be in the next Fred Astaire pic-
ture, however, for Joan Fontaine
has that leading role nailed down.
Joan has been working like a
beaver, taking dancing and singing
lessons preparing - for this big
chance. Ruby's first will be “Love
Below Freezing,” the picture which
will bring little Mitzi Green back to
the screen.
a
A few weeks ago Josephine Hutch-
inson was busily reading piays,
planning to go back to the stage be-
cause she was so depressed over the
parts Warner Brothers had given
her. But when her Warner contract
expired, M-G-M signed her up and
row she says she won't go back to
the stage until she is old enough to
play character roles.
a
Freddie Bartholomew's guardian
has lost one round of her battlg to
get M-G-M to pay
him more money.
The studio has taken
him out of the cast
of “Thoroughbreds
Don’t Cry’ and giv-
en the role to Doug-
las Scott who played
in “Wee Willie
Winkie.” As soon
as Freddie Bartholo-
mew started making
big money, his par-
ents, who had left
his care in the en-
tire charge of his
aunt from his infancy, swooped
down on the household and wanted
the privilege of spending his mon-
ey. A court fight followed wherein
his aunt tried to protect him, and
she did win his guardianship.
wo Won
ODDS AND ENDS—Peramount troupes
on location are running into plenty of
trouble: “The Buccanecr™ company near
New Orleans had their camera barge
wrecked in a sudden storm. An earth
quake in Alaska held up work on “Spawn
of the North” Furnacelike weather on
the California desert knocked out several
members of the “Wells Fargo” troupe, and
expense checks did not arrive in time to
cover production expenses of Clyde Elliot
and his gang in Singapore . . . Bob Burns
and nis bazooka hve a rival! Mischa
Auer has invented a pop-o-phone
plays it whenever Br Bom fr slightest
encouragement. It consists of a row of
pop bottles containing varying amounts of
water
© Western Newspaper Union
Freddie
Bartholomew
( NE, two, three!—here they are,
a trio of pretty little crocheted
frocks worn by a trio of pretty little
girls as pictured. And do little folk
of feminine gender love the dresses
that doting mothers and big sisters
crochet for them! Well, just show
this picture to wee daughter or sis-
ter or niece or little girl neighbor
and we wager that their opinion on
the subject will make elders seek
crochet hooks, yarns and books of
instructions instanter, forthwith and
without delay.
These cunning frocks are
posed to be party dresses—that's
the way the designers thereof listed
them on fashion's program, but for
our part charming as any one of
them would be to wear to a party,
we believe your little girl will be
wanting to wear her crochet dress
every day. Why not?
general wear will be found perfectly
practical, workable and demonstra-
ble for it is crocheted of fast dye
nercerized cotton yarn that washes
like new and is so much easier to
launder than a dress that has to be
ironed each time. Serviceable, too
—almost no wear-out to it!
Speaking of smart styling in cro-
have professionals paid so much at-
cent
years. The result speaks for
itself in the three models pictured
ILSeil
cess worn by little Miss Six-Year-
Old (possibly she may be seven):
anyway the dress shown to the left
reaches a new high in swank so far
as children’s fashions are con-
cerned. It is crocheted of mercer
ized cotton, and we leave it to you
to visualize it in the color your little
girl happens to like best. It has
puff sleeves as stylish as can be
and is buttoned all the way down
the front with crocheted buttons a
la smartest mode. It really does
not take long to crochet this dress
and it is delightful pick-up work to
inspire you to “improve each shin-
ing hour.”
Little Two-Year-Old, who stands
NEW SLEEK BLACKS
By CHERIE NICHOLAS
To all appearances much is *'go-
ing black before the eyes" of fash-
jon. At any rate there is nothing
in the way of a frock so outstanding
in early fall style showings as sleek
black gowns of either gleaming sat-
in or of slinky, slenderizing, flatter-
ing-to-the-figure jersey which may
be either a pure silk weave or of
synthetic texture. The vogue for
this type of frock is pronounced.
Deft drape effects predominate in
the fashioning of these stylish all-
black gowns somewhat after the
manner pictured. Top them with a
tall draped toque or one as shown.
centered in the foreground, has on
a fluffy-ruffle type of dress with
bows on the shoulders and a ribbon
run through the waistline of the
very full skirt. It is just the sort of
dress that makes an
adorable child lock more so. Why
not make two of ‘em, one for Sun-
day-go-to-meetin’ dress and one for
everyday service?
Party days for a small girl mean
ribbons and lace, cambric tea and
ice cream and cake. What could
be nicer to wear at such festive
times than the lacy dress which the
cunning youngster to the right is
wearing? It is crocheted of deli-
cate mercerized cotton quite to this
miniature queen's taste, you may
rest assured. It will also prove a
boon to mother for it is dependably
for all its fragile ap-
pearance, will wash, of course,
the lacy crochet into shape here and
doesn’t require the least mite of
ironing
lere’'s a
mothers
dresses
two to
over
play
suggestion or
who are making
for little daughter's
school wear. Leading Paris
couturiers are combining crochet
and various materials The idea
would work out admirably in ““fix-
ing over" children’s clothes. A cloth
or sturdy linen dress that needed
lengthening could be made attrac-
tive by adding desired inches of
plain crochet done either in the iden-
tical shade of the fabric it is to
trim or contrasting it. Make a
matching crochet belt of the mer-
cerized cotton and carry out the idea
further with crochet buttons and
perhaps decorative pockets of the
crochet.
© Western Newspaper Union.
and
om—
NEW FABRIC TRENDS
FOR AUTUMN SEASON
Trends in the silks and rayons
which Paris fabric houses have pre-
pared for the fall costume collec-
tions:
New plain silks have a softer,
more velvety touch, a duller surface
than before.
Rayons of intricate weaving are
dull, pebbled, “crushed,” have fine
matelasse patternings, Ottoman
ribs, plain or fancy, and many nov-
elty surfaces obtained by uneven
yarns.
Serge or twill weaves appear in
delicate silks or rich metals.
Neon lights have inspired a whole
group of lames made with colored
metal yarn, also new changeable,
mosaic, cashmere and jewel effects
using the same colored metal.
Novelty velvets are made with
pile that is completely dull or has
only a medium luster. Also with
printed gold backs or satin backs.
Metals and lames are finely pat-
terned or quite plain, elaborate in
texture and often have small Pais-
ley, Persian, Byzantine, Oriental
and Eighteenth century designs.
Capes Replace Jackets in
Early Ensembles for Fall
First autumn ensembles often re-
place coats or jackets by capes, and
are trimmed with sleek, flat furs.
One such is Martial and Armand’s
three-piece costume of brown wool,
glready ordered by several smart
women. The skirt features front
fullness and is topped by a leopard
gilet which shows beneath a hip-
length circular case of the brown
wool finished with a tiny flat collar
of leopard skin that is knotted un-
der the chin.
Pleats for Autumn
Autumn will be a season to wear
box-pleated numbers with built-up
waistlines, and the newest manner
of raising a waistline is to build the
skirt up at the sides only.
‘Way Back When
By JEANNE
FARLEY WAS ONCE A B)OUK.
KEEPER
TOT everyone can be an individ-
ualist ana blaze his own trail
to fame. Some of us are better fit-
ted for falling into line as part of
an organization. James A. Farley's
rise in politics is an example of
the rewards which may come to the
good lieutenant.
Farley was born in 1889 in Grassy
Point, N. Y., a small village on the
hudson river. There were five chil
dren, and the father was a saloon
keeper. When Jim Farley was ten
years old, his father died and his
combination sa-
loon and grocery store. The boy
Through these jobs he
learned to meet the public, be
friendly with strangers and 1 ow
sympa
He
school
thy for their problems
ied the Stony Point higl
and the Packard commercial school
in New York. Graduating in 1806,
he was employed as a bookkeeper.
interested in poli
id enough
use-1o-house,
vole In
atler
m was always
ics; and. befors he was
vote, he called he
setting out Democratic
ny Point
His first political job was as town
clerk of Stony Point. He was cour
ly. a hale-fellow-well-
had a pat on
Through Al
he he ped elect
New and Frank.
velt, whom * Was
ul lieutenant in the President
al campaign, Farley forgec stead
ily ahead He won the top political
plum in the United States, post
master general
the
teous to all, y
rt of man
the back for
met! § whic
evervone
fred E Smith, whon
or of
Roose
7 nad
10K,
for
POET WAS ONCE A LAWYER
I EAD this story of the conven-
tional lawyer who became one
of our most famous poets. Not a
dreaming, unsuccessful lawyer, but
a man with a profitable and impor-
tant law practice, important envugh
to associate with Clarence vVarrow
at one time A busy man of com-
merce who became “a writer of
songs and poems, sonnets, essays
and dramal
Edgar Lee Masters was born in
the little town of Garnett, Kan., in
18 His father was a descendant
of old Virginia stock: his mother,
the daughter of a Methodist minister
and descendant o. Israel Putnam of
American Revolutionary fame. The
family moved to Petersburg, Ill,
and later to Lewistown, where Ed.
gar was raised in the typically re
spectable atmosphere of small town
America
He did newspaper work for the
lucal weekly, learned the printing
trade, and studied law under his
father, who wes one of the leading
lawyers in the state. In 1891 Ed-
gar Lee Masters was admitted to
with his father. The following year
lawyer until 1920,
But even in high school, Edgar
He contributed to the Wa-
wrote poems for a Chicago news-
paper. His first book, published in
1898, while he was struggling to es-
tablish a practice in Thicago, was
called simply “A Book of Verses.”
“Songs and Sonnets” followed, but
none of them attracted much at-
tention until his “Spoon River An-
thology’ was published in 1915.
Those of you who lament your
unexciting lives and yearn for op-
portunity, look at his dual person-
ality, the who has won such
hizh awa irr the realms of lit-
erature.
© WNU Service.
SCW-your-own
A Dutch Treat.
er gets 8
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8 pretty
¢ crepe, rayon
Sweet 'n’ Simple.
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It heightens
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healthy
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“ ”
Chic for the G. F.
And a treat for all concerned is
Sew-Your-Own has cre-
ated for The Girl Friend. She may |
legiate, high schoolish, a |
ther’'s helper, or a young |
lady of leisure, but whatever she
look the part and prettier
in a take-off on Pattern 1327. It is
new, novel, and easy to sew. Itis
undoubtedly the frock to wear
when your escort, the time, and
the place are important,
The Patterns.
dattern 1372 is designed for sizes |
34 to 46. Size 36 requires 4%; yards
of 35-inch material.
Pattern 1987 is designed for sizes
%} frock
the frock
be col
steno, mu
is she'll
Finds Way to Have
Young-Looking Skin
utterly wonderful how
wickly this scientific
takesaway “age film”
5 nights! At 30
wore now
e-petally soft,
yout hfuily dear
hin Golden Peacock
Bleach Creme acts the only way 10 free skin of
A 3 film of semi vaste dark
velation for ugly hack heads,
surface pimples Try Get
Peacock Bleach Creme at any drug
or department store, or send 50c 10
Peacock Inc., Dept. L325, Parn, Tenn
Hote. YORK
7th AVE, at 36th ST.
From
TT Per Day 50 Per Day
* SINGLE * DOUBLE
Large, Airy Rooms
*FIREPROOF * NEW DECORATED
* Opposite Macy's
: agly. oid -dooking
ng pariicies’ A fe
freckles. tox
In
NEW YORK
(SP SEI BPR
I IA Vy
AGENTS
LADIES, Sell quality Maisonette Frocks
shirts and ties £3 10 85 daily Beautiful
Fall Line now ready WARD STILSON
CO., 425 Mansey Bldg. Md
Baltimere,
Beware of
Have you ever noticed that in
very hot weather your organs of
digestion and elimination seem to
become torpid or lazy? Your food
sours. forms gas, causes belching,
heartburn, and a feeling of rest-
lessness and irritability. Perhaps
you may have sick headache,
nausea and dizziness or blind
spells on suddenly rising. Your
tongue may be coated, your com=-
plexion bilious and your bowel
actions sluggish or insufficient,
Biliousness!
These are some of the more
common symptoms or warnings of
biliousness or so-called “torpid
liver,” so prevalent in hot climates.
Don't neglect them. Take Calo-
tabs, the improved calomel com-
pound tablets that give you the
effects of calomel and salts, com-
bined. You will be delighted with
the prompt relief they afford.
Trial package ten cents, family
pkg. twenty-five cts. At drug
stores. (Adv)
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