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About The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 12, 1930)
PAGE SIX THE EVENING HERALD. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON Tuesday, August 12, 1(J3G Hollywood Story COPYRIGHT 1930 ffv NEA SERVICE Inc. (ty ERNEST LYNNf chapter xm 'Just simple little routine now, MIm Winter anything at all," Hurley Mid. He swung around on the piano auiol ao he could wat.-li her, but hit (Infer were very busy on the keya and he beat lime oftly with hi foot aud hla head went up and down In nnilllnn accompaniment. The piano aounded atranitely there In the shadows, a small the morale of. the organisation with hla Inslslanoe ou foolish rou tine. Itorlmer, looking at Ann Win ter, watching the little mile play ing on her Una. was clad (or her aake that she had no Adamsou to contend with. A arroen teal day after tomorrow ... He was proud of her . . . Mo thought: "And she did It by ovrselt, too no pull." iriH vhIia In a vast emnllnega. r.i. h.r on ta unfamiliar stena. 0( course, there had been a But Hurler's irln waa (rlendly word or two from tiarry Sloan. and encouraging, and Harvey Bell land a word from Sl.uu went sprawled cheerfully In a chair and j long way. . . . Well. iy time a smoked a cigar, and there was mere extra girl could catch the that In his attitude which conrey- eve of the great Sloan the girl ed the feeling that the proceeding I must hare something. "And Anne .., -i .11 .ii'.iirr. One look-I has." Itorlmer thought, and he ed at him and took heart. . And presently Anne begau to dame. Lightly aud easily, aim pie stops, for all of the gymnastic tap-tap-lapping 01 ieei ana rpm liv of movement. Approval lighted Director Hur ler's eves as he nodded. He switched to a wait! tune, watched her keeuly as she adapted herself Immediately to the new rylhm. Once or twice the girl fumbled un certainly in the unfamiliar rou tlue, but there was no awkward ness In Anne Winter's lithe aad graceful body, and when he came to the end of the tuue be g t up at once and shook her hand and told her she had done very well. "And. Mr. Hell," Hurley said, tella me vou haven't taken any lessona since you were a little kid." Anne told him that was ao, and he said. "Well, you haven't any thing to worry about. We've got an instructor who'll hava you dancing like Ann Pennington In aweek." More seriously he informed her that be had been more Interested In what she looked like while dancing than in the actual per formance of the steps. "Know what 1 mean? Some girls have all sorts of technique but very little natural grace to go with It." He turned to Dell and told the cast ing director that one could guess Anne Winter would be a good dancer from the way she walked. Bell nodded, and said that was true. "I wonder," he said, with a smile (or Anne, "whether Miss Winter would mind terribly 1( we asked her to slug a little." "rteallv. Mr. Bell " Anne be gan, but Fred Hurley had aeated himself at the piano. With a wave of bia arm he commanded Anne to come over beside him. and be began to bum aa he played. Anne told Rorlmer that even ing: "Tber were wonderful to me. Dan! 1 didn't dance well really; I felt aa clumsy aa an ele phant." "Yeah, I imagine so." said Dan dryly. "I bet you knocked them right out of their seats." "Don't be silly!" "I mean it." he Insisted. "What did they say about your ainglng? Remember what I told you. if you ever got chance." Anne laughed. "Oh. I'm all evAted. Dan! They liked it. I'm to have a screen test." "Sa-ay! That's pretty fine! When?" "Day after tomorrow." Itorlmer said that, under the circumstances. they centalnly ought to celebrate. "How about a dance after the movie?" Anne demurred. "It's too warm, Dan." "Well, a drive, then, to the beach." He brought his car to a stop in the parking lot beside the Chinese theatre, and Anne said, as they turned toward the lobby tha. a drive certainly sounded more appealing. Sitting beside her In the thea tre be watched her. and be kept her In his thoughts, paying scant attention to the atory that was unfolding on the screen. Anne's eyes shone with a happy, eager light, but otherwise she seemed calm and cool. Anne, be thought, always seemed that way. The day bsd been hot it was the middle of May now and Anne had been under a strain; but she looked as cool aud fresh as though she bad stepped out of an electric refrig erator to meet him. His own day bad not gone so well: nothing seemed to go well nowadays at Continental, with .Martin Collins gone over to the Amalgamated lot and Adamson on the warpath with one of bis peri odical campaigns for economy. . . . Renseles and trivial. . . . Save a few dollars a month by taking out s couple of the office telephones . . . waste thousands by spoiling laughed a little guiltily as Anne turned her head and confronted him. She said, "Are you looking at the picture, or not?" "Yes." he said, grinning. "It's great. Isn't it?" "You're Incorrigible, Dan Ror lmer." "I'm nothing of the kind, he whispered. "I've been doing noth ing but sitting here being proud of you in a big way. Yon can't bate me (or that, can you?" He tbought: "I wonder if 1 ought to tell ber about the row 1 bad with Adamson today? 1 sup pose not; she'd think I was craiy. And maybe I am." But later that evening he told Paul Collier. He and Collier had been living together for aome time now, in an apartment oft Holly wood boulevard a short distance east of Vine street. First, though, be drove Anne out to Santa Monica, and they aat in the cooling wind that blew oft tbe water and watched the ocean and talked. Remember the other night we were out here. Anne?" Anne nodded. Sha said she thought she could remember ev erything they had talked about that night, even mouth it was three monthe ago. "It was an eventful day. Dan my first day at Grand I'nited. (or one thing: nd that was tbe day I met Mona." Today was an eventful one. Anne. ... I suppose you've never regretted movuir In with Mona and Eva, have Tn?" The look that Anne turned on him held a question. "We've been very happy together. They've kept me from being lonely, and I bate loneliness. I'm afraid of lu... Why do you ask!" Dan said he didn't (now exact ly. "Unless it's because I was thinking of Eva. I'm rather sor ry for Eva. Anne: she seems so cheerless." , 'Not all tbe time," Anne cor rected, and Dan, looking up at the star-strewn sky and smoking, said it was bis guess that Eva at one time or otber must have been badly broken up over a love af fair. 'Because," he explained, "she's so oh, I don't know so defens ive when men are around. Paul Collier said tbe same thing about her. Sbe doesn't bare very much use for men, does she?" "Era likes you," Anne told him, evasively, and Dan nodded solemnly and admitted that Eva had once told him that. "But I think," be added, "that Eva bad measured me In her mind for some time; weighing me in the balance, you might say." He laughed. "Aud why, do you sup pose? "Why!" Anne asked. "Because," Dan said, "I think Eva bad your interest in mind. In some ways she reminds me of a mother hen; sbe seems so fierce ly protective of Mona, and you. too. I tbink Eva was trying to make up her mind wbetber I was the right kind of young man for little Anne Winter to associate with." Anne laughed. "Now you're being silly again, Dan Rorlmer." "Yon don't mean that at all: there was absolutely no convic tion in the way you said it," be accused ber, and Anne made no answer. Dan said. "In a sense, Eva's quite a comfort to me. I'm a lit tle worried about yon myself, and with Era around to oust a critical eye over the competition, it's well, it's something for my peace of mind." Anne, snuggling down In her seat and still smiling at him. said: "Can't yon ever be serious?" and Dan replied that he was a darn GRAY HAIR AND DANDRUFF FOR YEARS BANISHED BY NEW TONIC Prominent Teacher Gets Kid of His Gray Hair and Dandruff by Using; Lea's Wonderful Hair Tonic READ WHAT THIS GENTLEMAN SAYS "I waa troubled with premature ly (ray hair and dandruff. It was .turning gray at 19 years o( age and smite (ray at 35. Dandruff fell to profusely my coat was often littered with it, but nothing I found would stop the dandruff, un til I bought Lea's Hair Tonic. This remarkable preparation easily kept my hair its youthful color, and tha dandruff entirely disap peared. I'm convinced Let's Hair ionic win do all the company says it will," writes froresaor A. If. Bailey, teacher in High School, at Mountain Grove, Mo. 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"All you have to do to find out," he said, "is to give me a lit tie encouragement," and he look ed away from her and took anoth er clgarot from the package lu hit pocket. Anne said, with a provocative little laugh. "Yeah?" "Yeah," he answered. "And I wish you wouldn't use slang. It's not becoming In a young lady on her way to stardom, and uudcr the present circumstance it's quite un i romantic." He thought:' 'It would 1 serve you right if I kissed you here and now for saying that.' but he remembered with unpleas jaul vivldiiets, and a certain amount of hurt pride, what bad 1 happened on the one occasion that he had tried it: and he knew a stift-neiked determination not to try it again unless the invitation was unmistakable. 1 Kva and Mona were sleeping when Auue got back to the bunt. a , low, but Korlmer. when he return ed to his apartment, found Paul Collier seated before his portable typewriter aud turning out copy lu a cloud of pipe smoke. Collier looked up shortly at Collier's entrance and turned back to his work. "Come in. sou." he said, "and tell papa all the news." Dan felt a malicious satisfac tion that Collier would be Jolted out of his jocular casualnces with in a brief second. Ho said, and be began leisurely to remove bia coat: "I tore up my contract to day, papa. How's that for news?" (To Be Continued I San Francisco to Celebrate "Harbor Day" August 2 1st On August II. "Harbor Day" will be celebrated in San Fran cisco In honor of the concentra tion of the Pacific battleehip fleet in the San Francisco hay. The fleet will be in the harbor from August It to It Is expected that the South ern Paciflo will offer low rate fares from Klamath Falls to San Francisco for this occasion, al though no definito announcement of this has been made. On August II gala festivities will mark the bay city celebration. A grand parade. In which close to J. 000 uniformed sailors will take part will be held. The 19 vessels in the fleet will be open during the day for public inspection, aa well as all tbe commercial ships In' the harbor at that time. Navy races and marine lifeboat races will me held. A marine parade will be featured In the afternoon, to be followed br an evening dis play of fireworks, an electrical display from tbe fleet, and a dance on one of the large ships. Democratic Meeting To Be Held Tonight Democratic precinct committee will meet this evening at S o'clock in the office of Mrs. L. B. Hague in the Willlts building -when a re port will be received from the nominating committee appointed at the last session. Committee composed of Noble Canter. B. P. Alexander, Mrs L. B. Hague. George Grizzle and G. W. Bratton were elected to fill office vacancies existing on the democratic ballot. Tbe candidates they select must receive tbe en dorsement of the committee before the names can be placed on tbe ballot, however. All committeemen are urged to attend the meeting tonight wblch will be one of the most Import ant before the election In Ner ember. Use of bicycles bas Increased steadily in Switzerland in recent years, until tbe ratio now Is about one fur every five inbabitants. Today In Klamath's Theatres AT TIIK rKI.IC.lM .kaVMMgsstagMg One of the best loved figures of the screen. Holier! Kdeson, has a prominent role In 'Cameo Klrby' Fox Movie tone romantic musical drama, which will be seen and heard on the audible scrveu of the Peliuan theatre. Kdeson. in his day one of Ameri ca's most popular matinee Idols, baa mellowed with the years aud. according to -rl'.lis. is a much belter actor now thai lu the davs when be was at the height o( his fume on the stage. The audible screen proved a great boon to Kdeson, and he was one of the first of .he veterans to adopt himself to (his new medium. Proof of his great talent aud popularity la seen in that he Is in constant demand lu Holly wood and has stead ustly refused to sign a permanent contract, pre ferring to freelance. AT TIIK PINK TKKK ine newest out aireauy one of the most popular of romantic "teams In motion pictures comes o tbe Pine Tree Theatre today In First National s spectacular, all-color "Song of the Flame." Alexander Gray and Uernlee Claire first met as singers In the operetta "Tbe Desert Song," trie (ormer as leading man and the latter as an understudy who made good when the star was put out by Illness. Notth Beery. Alice Gentle. Inez Courtney and Bert Itoacb are others in the cast. The story Is basically a simple love tale wherein war upsets the normal relationship between a Polish prince and a peasant girl. It is complicated considerably by he topsv-turvy chaos (ollowlng the Russian revolution, with Decry as a Communist leader and Miss Gentle as his consort. Tbe story istaged against tbe colorful background of the Rus sian revolution, with thousands o( real Russians in mobs, scenes of fighting in barricaded streets. pillage, fcsstlng aud debauch. "Song of the Flame" presents massive sets accnrrately reproduc ing parts of Moscow, Pelrograd, and other Russian cities and vill ages. AT TIIK 1.1HKRTV . Oceau liners sailing to and from San Pedro, California, were frequently "bove to" off tbe Point Flrmin lighthouse during the filming o( "Undertow," Univer sal (eature starring Mary Nolan, wblch ia now being shown at the Liberty theatre, so that tha pas sengers could watch tbe Harry Pollard company on location mak ing pictures. Sometimes as many as tluee'or (our liners, their decks lined with passengers watching through glasses, would He aa close to the light as they dared while the exterior scenes were bring shot. John Mack Brown supports Miss Nolan, with Robert Ellle playing tbe "heavy" and Audrey Ferris, AT TIIK VOX The height of somethlng-or- . "In "Cameo Klrby," Kdeson enacts a role tbat seems made to order for htm. He Is tue genial Colonel Randall, weaity plantat ion owner of Ihe das of ls&u, whose belief that all men are as honorable aa be, leads him Into tragic difflcultii-a when ho becom es the victim of an uuscruplous Mississippi River boat gambler. J. Harold Mm ray and Norma Terrls are co-starred lu "Uauico Klrby." other In outdoor sports was dis covered by tbe Tiffany unit on locution for "1'oider liu.i.iin, e," tbe all-talking picture which Don Terry. Armlda, Marjorle Kane. V .' , Hurry. Victor I'ulel and many others take pari. Players going on location take along cards, honks, golf clubs and Innumerable devlcas uf amusement to take care uf Idle hours when not In scenes. And one thing that must bo tnkeu Is a sense of humor. Without II, hardships and work liocome mon otonous. On the second duy It waa noticed by Hie company, shortly after lunch, that Harry and Terry bad sat for one hour lu Iwo minus rhalra, side by side, with out moving once. Apparently they were usleep. The thermo meter had passed a decent mark and no one felt Ilka disturbing them. It was loo hot even to perpetrate a Joke. tiuddeuly Harry leaped up wltb a blood-curdling shriek. "(lot him! Got liliu! I.ook.11 hey, look!" The nearest prop man grab bed the rattlesnake medicine and six cowboys rame running wltb drawn guns, all thinking. Ill the evcl! (i-nt, Hint teller Wesley or Don must have born bitten. Then the two rolltiiiaAit In their ch ilis, laughing at Iho company, Harry held a string In bis hand. On Iho nlhnr end was a noose and In the nunse was a gopher. He and Terry had beau waiting (or over an hour with a noose drawn around a gopher bole, and success Imd crowned their vigil. "Hilly Utile animal," said Itlrh. ard Thorpe, director o( "llordnr Romance," lo go (or a gag like that!" "Ilorder Romance" la Hie at traction until Thursday at tha Vox Theatre. TIMTH HPr.UO rAltlS. Mull leaving hers fot lluenos Aires reaches tha farad South American city In .broe and one-half das. Ily air mall It la flown, leaving here al 7 p. m., aud making the (light lo lluonns Aires by the afternoon, three dava later over tha route between San Luis de Henegal and Natal. For mal de mer Seasickness has no terror for most people who travel with a bottle of our malted milk tablets. They satisfy hunucr without overloading the stomach. Also try them for relief from fatigue, throat irritations and sleeplessness. A lunch that travels with you. At the best drug stores. HORLICK'S ACINI. WISCONSIN The last word in electric irons The complete automatic iron. One Iron does all of the work. Light, medium or heavy goods make no difTrrcnrs when you have an "American Beauty" ad justable automatic iron the one great improvement in electric irons in years. 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