The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, October 19, 1929, Image 7

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~~ "ye ‘Dallas District” W. C. T, U.
meeting held in the Idetown church on
Tuesday afternoon was well attended.
An impromptu program was enjoyed
by the guests and a delicioug - and
rather unusual luncheon served by the
hostess. J
A good number of church school
workers have enrolled for the study
course to be given by Rev. Burleigh
following the hour of prayer on Wed-
nesday evening. The book being used
js “Missionary Education in the
. Church,” by Gates. It is one of the
standard training courses and those
who successfully complete the work
‘wil receive a certificate which gives
that person one credit. Twelve credits
are reuired for graduating.
Four of our church school workers
have already earned two certificates
and four others hold one certificate.
The aim of our school and of every
up-to-date school is to have every
worker a graduate of the standard
training work.
Mrs. Emery Hadsal, Alfred and Ben-
ton Hadsel spent Sunday afternoon
and evening with Mrs. John Montgom-
ery at Kingston.
Ed. Smith received an injury to his
hand while at work last week.
Clark Smith was seriously hurt dur-
ing football practice last Monday noon
when he came into a head on collision
with another player, He has been un-
der the doctor's care since the acci-
. dent. 2
Mrs. Libbie M. Ide called on Mrs.
Leonard Ide and Mrs. James Ide last
week.
Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Neely, Mr. and
Mrs. Ralph Neely and Mrs. Neely's
mother, Mrs. Scott, Mrs. Ralph Welsh
and Helen and Bobby Welsh made an
enjoyable motor trip over the splendid
new highway to Towanda last Sunday.
Mr, and Mrs. Ralph Welsh and
family were guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Fred Welsh of Dallas last week.
Mrs. Frank Hobbs of Stroudsburg is
visiting her sister, Mrs. Bruce Shaver.
Miss Lydia Smith, who is a student
at Bloomsburg State Teachers’ Col-
lege, visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Walter Smith, last week-end.
The boys’ Sunday school of
class
‘an
‘mimicry.
which Howard Crosby is the "teacher, |
met at his home last week for the pur- |
the |
| He tells her the talk about “paying
Results of
Renshaw, ‘\presi-
secretary and
sergeant at
pose of ‘organizing.
election were: Elwood
dent; Harry Rogers,
treasurer; Bud Davis,
arms.
freshments were served to the follow-
ing: Elwood Renshaw, Harry Rogers,
Bud Davis, Glenn Spencer, Alfred and
Benton Hadsel, Robert Wright and Al-
fred Smith.
The Howard 2eilly family have
closed their cottage and returned- to
the valley for the winter season.
Last Sunday morning completed the
series of three sermons by Rev. Bur-
leigh on the subject of ‘Life After
Death.” The discussion showed the
same dep study and broad-minded at-
I titude which characterize all Rev.
Burleigh’s sermons, A large congre
gation including people from neighbor-
ing towns and from the valley followed
the series with interest. 3 .
haetumeral of Mrs. ‘Hannah Shaver
~ was held from the home of her son,
Bruce Shaver, on Monday afternoon.
A large number of friends and rela-
tives were present. Rev. Brundle of
Wyoming, a former pastor, paid a
peautiful tribute to her memory. There
were a great many floral offerings,
There will ge a Hallowe'en party
held in the P, H. Park’s garage next
Thursday evening, October 24, under
the auspices of the Ladies’ Aid Society.
Everybody is invited to attend there
will be games and eats appropriate to
the season. Come in costume and we
promise you an enjoyable evening.
0
-Lehman-
There will be an entertainment con-
sisting of three short plays given by
Mrs. Howell's division of the Ladies’
Aid Society on Friday evening, Octo-
ber 26, in M. E. Church basement.
Everybody welcome. Admission, 25
cents. ¥
There was quite a number of people
from this place attended the funeral of
Mrs. Hannah Shaver at Idetown on
Monday afternoon, :
Kathleen Johnson is improving
nicely after an operation for, appendi-
citis at General hospital in Wilkes-
Barre.
Mrs. Libbie Ide of Idetown spent a
day with Ellis Ide and family recently.
The Truth Seekers Sunday School
class was entertained at the home of
L. U. Case at Jackson on Wednesday
afternoon by Mrs. Case and Mrs. Case
and Mrs. H. G. Miers. After the devo-
tional and business session a sooial
time was enjoyed and lunch served to
the following: Mrs. I. IL. Nulton, Mrs.
B, F. Nulton, Mrs. R. D. Major, Mrs.
Ollie Whitesell, Mrs. G. Shupd, Mrs.
Reese Thomas, Mrs. W. R. Neely, Mrs.
A. W. Sutton, Mrs. H. Brandon, Mrs.
‘W. H. Parks, Mrs. Ralph Johnson, Mrs,
&. BE. Brown, Mrs. A. B. Ide, Mrs.
James Ide, Mrs. Fred Harlos, Eleanor
Atkinson, Myrtle Major, Mildred
Green, Emma Case, Rush Fisk, Mrs.
Alice Fisk, Mrs. Francis Lewis, Mrs.
George Lewis, Bettey Lewis, Margaret
Miers, W. R. Neely, L, U. Case, Mrs.
H. G. Miers and Mrs. Case.
Mr. Hacker is moving from Hunts-
ville to the James Pembleton home at
this place.
Mrs. John Vollinger entertained
friends from Nanticoke on Sunday
afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. G. D. Clark of Wilkes-
Barre and Mr. and Mrs, H. W. Garey
of Shavertown were callers at James
Ide’s on Tuesday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. John Fine have moved
to Courtdale.
Om St Ls
MRS. SICKLER ENTERTAINS
Mr. and Mrs. Joséph Sickler of Beau-
mont entertained on Saturday Mrs.
Sickler’'s brother, Mor and Mrs. Loren
Maines and sons, Lester and Loren, of
New York City. In the afternoon they
motored to Jenningsville to visit MT.
and Mrs. John Allen. Mr. and Mrs.
Creston Gallup and daughter Alice of
Kunkle, Mrs. Ellen Mansfield of Noxen
and Mrs. aKte Taylor also were guests
on Sunday.
After # pleasant social hour re- |
WHAT'S GONE BEFORE
Remember Steddon comes West to
avoid revealing the result of an un-
fortunate love affair to her father.
The Rev. Dr. Steddon, a clergyman
of kind heart but narrow mind, who
attributes much of the evil of the
world to the ‘movies’ and constantly
lover, Elwood Farnaby, ,having died in
inveighs against them. Mem, her
accident, at the advice of Dr.
Bretherick, gives her bad cough as an
excuse to get to Arizona and from
there writes home that she has met
and married “Mr. Woodville,” a wholly
imaginary person. Later she writes
again to say that her “husband” has
died in the desert. She takes a job as
a domestic to avoid being a burden on
her parents. A fall prevents her be-
coming a mother. In Arizona she had
met
Tom Holby, a leading man in a mo-
tion picture company, and through him
gets the opportunity t» play a part in a
desert drama. With tae company is
Robina Teele, a star, fond of Holby
and
Leva Lemaire,
After her accidert,
friendly with
Mrs. Dack, a poor woman of Palm
Springs, Arizona, and takes an interest
in her bright little son.
Terry Dack, who has a great gift of
Inspired by a letter from
Leva. Mem plans to go to Los Angeles
to take a job in a film laboratory.
She gets a job in a film labtoratary,
but loses it. She meets a’ Mrs. Sturgis
from her home town, who talks of the
evils of the movies and says the stars
an extra woman.
Mem becomes
T
+ ILLUSTRATED BY
DONALD? RILEY «7
less actress, The gale was to be pro-
vided by an airplane propeller mounted
on a truck.
around the wind machine?” she asked
Kendrick.
“To keep people from walking into
the propeller,” said Kendrick.
After an hour preparation the army
was ready for the battle. *
A gentle rain fell from the pipes. The
fire host, aimed upon the air, added
its volume. The wind machine set up
its mad clatter: The water and the
lightning filled it with shattering fire.
Then Men was called forth. She
clutched her cloak about her and
thrust into the tempest. It was like
driving through a slightly rarefied
cataract. She hardly reached the pil-
lar at the edge of the porch, clutched
it for a moment, caught a quick
breath, and flung down the steps. And
that was that. ‘All this preparation for
one minute of action!
Mem inspected the settings she
was so briefly to adorn.
“Why do they build that fence]
HUGH,
WW
wrapped in blankets while the next]
scene was prepared, She was sup-|
posed to have run a long distance be-|
tween the last scene and this, and she
must enter wet. |
At length she
went forward -a
the wild storm.
During her absence a telephone pole
and a tree had been brought down by |
the storm and photographed as they |
fell. It was her business. now to
clamber across the pole
through the branches of the tree, and
so fight her way>~out of the picture.
The wind machine had been shifted
several times. THe wind 'man in his
confusion forgot to notice that the
property men had forgotten, in their
confusion, to set up the fence before
the propeller. It was after midnight
now and .everybody was numb with
cold, drenched with the promiscuous
rain, and a little irresponsible. Their
working day was already fifteen hours
old and it would last at least five
and |
into |
got her signal
gain, head down,
OEE
po
for all, $600.
productive, smooth and level.
Price, $5000 for farm only.
are forced to sell their souls. Mem
then learns her mother is coming to
visit her. Mem is worried about her
finan'ces.
She sees a casting
Tirrey, and abruptly offers herself to
him in return for a job in the movies.
the
at-
the
price” is all rot. Meanwhile the
tention of Mr. Bermond, head of
company, is diverted to her and he de-
cides to give her a chance. Soon she
finds herself posing with Claymore as
her director, obeying his commands in
a kind of stupor.
Mem’s father reads a publicity story
calling her “the prettiest girl in
America” and writes a letter of pro-
teste to his wife, and daughter, Mem’s
fame begins to spread, and Claymore,
the director, takes an unusual interest
in per. He is infatuated with Mem but
tries to be aloof and professional to
hide the fact from the company.
Mem and Claymore become more and
more inerested in each. Out riding
one May, Claymore 'makes physical ad-
vances to her. While they are park-
ing a hold-up man approaches and de-
mands their money.
NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY
Claymore was sane enough ito a'-
tempt no resistance, though he almost
perished from chagrin. He endured
insolence of the masked stranger who
stole the chain and a wallet and the
loose silver.
The blackguard held his clubbed pls
tol over Claymore’s head a moment,
then forebore to strike, and dropped
from the step with a last warning.
“Sit pretty now and keep 'em up till
I git goin’ or I'll—
His car shot around the curve.
Claymore brought down his aching
arms. They were too much ashamed
of themselves to return. to their late
post about Mem’s shoulders.
A preverse remore filled, their souls
with: confusion; a remorse because of
a wrong remorse, a disgust for an un-
acecpted temptation and for being so
temptable.
A woman never guite forgives a ‘man
for not dying for het at the first op-
portunity. She probably’ never quite
forgives him for dying either.
Se the clever man evades the situa-
tion where a choice is required, as the
virtuous man evades temptation while
he is yet far off.
Claymore, brooding deeply in his
earnest soul, felt that he owned Mem
some atonement, He meant it nobly,
but it sounded crude when he checked
the car in front of her little home and
took her hand and said:
“If you will let me marry you, Ti
see that 'my wife divorces me.”
These divorces of conbenience
marked the new-fashioned way of ac-
complishing righteousness.
to make her “an honest woman.”
Mem laughed nervously.
“No thanks!” It was as uninspired
as possible, but then it is sot easy to
make a brilliant answer to a stupid
suggestion. She felt that she must
improve on it a bit, but she! helped it
a little when she added: “Just as
must obliged. Good night!”
Two days later she began work with
Tom Holby's company. Holby de-
scribed the part she was to play, read
her the big scenes.
People make love unconsciously at
times and in the truest courtships
never a word is spoken. Two souls
travel mystic gardens together and
come to deep understandings without
the exchange of a syllabled thought.
The orders had gone forth to rush
the Holby picture to a conclusion. Big
night-storm scenes had been scheduled
for the final takes, and on the final
morning the first scene were begun
promptly at nine. Kendrick promised
to let the company go at three to rest
for the all-night grind, but it was not
until half past seven that the day's
work was done.
At nine they went to the first of the
sets. The Californian night was black
and cold, The night in the story was
one of tempest and battle. Tom Holby
must run an automobile into a ditch
and 'make a desperate war against
four brutes who were instructed to put
up a good fight.
Each bit of scenery through which
she was to flash had been made ready
the day before. Perforated rain pipes
were reinforced by men who would
play a fire hose or two upon the hap-
director, Arthur |g
0 0. 0. 0. 00
($0000 059 059090
*
He wanted |
BEER
|
EIBEIEIBLIRe
SE EF REE Fes OR RR RRR
FARMS FOR SALE
40 ACRES, 6-room house, fine spring of water, some timber.
300 ACRES, 10-room house, two very large barns.
team of horses and farming tools, $8,500, and on easy terms.
30 ACRES, 9-room house; water in the house; good barn and silo;
three-car garage, two hen houses; stream of never-failing water
runs across the farm. This farm on the hard road.
SEE
Price
The land is very
One-half mile from hard road:
With twenty cows, one bull, goed
her
hours more. eT |
Tom Holby had been photographed
in a climb up the wet sides of a ravine,
and. was halt frozen ;
clothes, but he stayed to watch Mem
through this scene.
| again,
| fallen tree.
wet flesh cruelly.
in his
drove into the ‘wreck
the propellers still ‘swirled: Pe,
Sake horror of the moment.
The lightning just
ahead of her blistered her vision like
She was taken to a warm room and | the white-hot irons driven ihto the
eves of Shakespeare's Prince Clarence. |
The wind blew her breath back into | bewilderment.
lungs.
football tackler, hooked his
face like seaweed. "
little support from one stout bough of | the light of the sun arc
the ‘margin of the picture.
camera range.
the camera men were jubilant as each | helped Tom Holby.
of them shouted “O. K. for me!
|
and ig te
of Mem still pressing on straight into |
the blur of the airplane propeller.
His heart sickened.
sliced to shreds.
Kendrick’s
triumph as he saw her pass out of the
He called, “Cut!” and |
Then
rror, wild howls of fear, He ran for-| road.
ward and saw the blinded little figure | gushing blood.
heart was
Kendrick heard
gle
| the tree she could never have reached |
|
1d
19
screams of When his head struck a
She would
She could not hear
the yelled warnings in the noise of the
machine. ?
The operator shut off his engine, but
| to lift her from , the ground.
He had knocked himself
His cheek was
| He came to his senses
| forced a ghastly laugh.
be
cape.
and anxiety. f
(CONTINUED NEXT WEEK
that made them only a whorl of light.
The witnesses were paralyzed by the
Tom Ho by broke from a nightmare
| that cutran the immedi !
She struggled with the maniac: hur- { the girl wa'king re ri
ricane, stumbled and fell across the | fate.
telephone pole, thrust aside the wires, |
lifted herself and breasted the wind | about her knees and flung her back-
of the | ward, thrusting his right arm and his
The branches whipped her | head beneath her. so that when she
struck, her shoulders were upon Ris
brenst, her drenched hair fell across his
He ran and dived for her like a
left arm
She opened here eyes in a chaos of
A : Re] Just above her the fly-
If she had not gained a|ing propeller blades were glistening in.
They were still revolving when the
| wind machine man, leaping from the
with | post where he had stood expecting her
| fate and his own eternal remorse, ran
Others:
unconscious
rock in the
ripped and
Mem screamed with fear for him.
She had not yet realized her own es-
She was all pity for Tom Holby,
—
Price $2,200.
ORE RE BE SE BU BOB BE Be BB BE Be BR BR BE Ba Beppe epee)
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All Roads Lead Directly To Our Big
Department Store At
Kingston Corners
As Old /
As Kingston
SERVICE, QUALITY AND SATISFACTION BUILT OUR
PRESENT BUSINESS :
Drive Your Car Right Into
EDWARDS, Inc.
RRR ETT
ESTABLISHED
{ot
As Modern
1873 As Today
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PATHFINDERS
Full Oversize
Balloons
202440 .........5 5.79
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3Ig525........ 1045
33x6.00 ........ 14.05
Big Qversize Cords
3023s 5... ..
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2% During September
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Fresh Stock—All Firsts—Lifetime Gyarantee—Fre Mounting
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Shavertown, Pa. :
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~ Lake Street, Dallas, Pa.
0, 00 0 02 0a o8s Fe 00 00 BPO 9 - ; ’ : : ; PR :
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000 I Aes Sgt Sg Ie Tet der Te 230 ele efron ate Seaie ade afeatesfaads fealo fleets eds 20ede odode rede
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Come in and see what
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J. H. FR ANTY, { West Side Department Store
% PHONE DALLAS 265-R-0 "DALLAS, PA. | KINGSTON, PA.
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