Newspaper Page Text
PAGE SIX
Social Buds Bloom at Night---
as Flowers of the Music Halls
SCRATCH A CABARET SONGSTER AND YOU'LL FIND
BLUE BLOOD; ONLY REAL TALENT SURVIVES
BY MARY MARGARET McBRIDE
(NEA Service Staff Correspondent)
NEW YORK-—The fact that every
third singer you have heard this
winter in Gotham supper clubs is
‘a socialite cannot be laid entirely
to our lovely debs’ need for self
expression. Shrewd club owners
who have seen a chance to attract
Park avenue trade without spend
ing a fortune were back of the idea
.and sometimes it worked.
- Ag a matter of fact, the reason
“that it goes on and on is that it
“worked so particularly well when
“the manager of Place Pigalle first
“thought it up and hired Eve Sym
%fitfln, daughter of Senator James
~Wadsworth, to warble for other
_people’'s supper. Her friends de
“scerided in droves and spent mon
&y, too.
" Pve iz married to the president
“of a stainless steel company and
“is the mother of two boys, Stew
‘art, ten, and James, eight. She
had sung for a long time at ama
wgeur affairs and benefits. In fact,
iithe night the manager of Place
* Pigalle had his bright thought, she
, was doing her bit ar a benefit.
# “That gal has something,” the
* manager confided to a friend —
" and offered Eve a two-week try
. out:
Dubious of First Offer
" At first, the singer was doubt
. ful. But her husband wanted her
to go ahead and so she engaged
herself for two weeks and sang
sixteen,
“I thought if that manager had
the nerve to hire me, I ought to
' have the nerve to be hired,” she
explained. “What 1 liked best
aboyt the engagement was the
chance to prove to myself that I
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Marjorie Logan . . . has her fling
; at singing
coulg do it. . I'd never been put
on my mettle before. You see, I
knew that if I turned out to be
no good, cut I'd go at the end of
my trial weeks,
“Friends might applaud but I had
to make good with strangers, too.
Nothing had ever been put up to
me in just that way before. My
husband and 1 both think it was
good for me.
“Singing every night, having a
job, working like a dog at rehear
sals has stimulated my interest in
everything, waked me up. 1 am a
better friend, a better wife, a bet
ter mother. I understand peoplée
better, and I can handle situations
Studebaker Conducts Contest To
Find Longest Continuous Owner
Winner to GCet First Car
Off Assembly Line. W.
G Sailers Local Dealer
+A nation-wide search for the
most faithful Studebaker owner’
in the United States was luunchedi
February when civic and business|
leaders of South Bend gathered
to honor Studebaker’'s eigthy-'
fourth anniversary. |
The search, unique in autome
tive history, will be conducted in
the manner of a contest. The win
ner will be given the first Stude
baker to come off the assembly\‘
lines during the corporation's
_eighty-fifth year. Production |
sehedules indicate that this car
will be a President Cruising
o
. Details of the contest have been
announced by Paul G. Hoffman,
president of Studebaker. W. G.
‘Bailers is the Athens Studebaker
_ “We are anxious to reward the
Studebaker owner who has been
‘most loyal for the greatest num
‘ber of vears,” said Mr. Hoffman.
“We are seeking the man or wo
%ggpiu- the best record of
s gwoacehip of _active
Studebaker automobiles over the
longest period of time. When we
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Eve Symington ~ 4 . “T hat gal has something.”
that before I never even Kknew
existed.”
The only ones who dre doubtful
about Miss - Symington’'s success
are her sons., They think the pub
licity she gets is rather silly and
they hope thit -at least she will
never go into the movies! |
Evie, as her friends call her, has
made SI,OOO a week, but most of
the other society girls get a good
deal less. In fact many of them
are glad to work for little or noth
ing for the sake of the excitement
and acclaim. :
| Kathlesn Barrie Also Careerit
| Another young woman, though,
iwho has turned out to be more
Ithan a faddist. (“here today and
{gone to Palm Beach tomorrow,” as
|one manager expresses it) is Mrs.
;\;V. R. K. Taylor, jr., whose singing
‘name is Kathleen Barrie. Kathleen
|was a child prodigy. She played
‘for concerts at the age of ten and
!sings because she loves to. She
{wants to get on the radio and hes
‘alroady had some air engagements,
iAlan, she says she is anxious to
iuccumulate 80 many experiences
|that when she ig ninety and joggles
jher great-grand-child on ;her knee
she won’'t bore the young one!
l Lois Elliman, daughter of the
[prnminent real estate family, was
lth(‘ second aocialite to get into the
night club field and she has retir
|ed to Westchester to wait for
| Prince Charming—so she says. Be
fore she left the field, however, zhe
discovered voung Timmie Dobhin,
'daughter of the Peter Schuylers
,whn recently married Norman
| Proctor Smith. Timmie turned up
|at the Club New Yorker one night
iand L.ois invited her to sing. Tim
mie has a husky voice and hill
lactively used will not count.
“Owners who believe they qual
| ify for this prize should go to
| their Studebaker dealer and ask
| for complete rules of the contest.
. “Dealers have been Turnished
| with official blanks upon which
| contestants relationship or asso
‘ciation with Studebaker may be
| written. These blanks, when filled
| out, should be sent to the factory
'in South Bend. The contest will
| run for a period of 90 days from
February 17 and the winner will
i be determined by a committee of
Studebaker executives. Employes
of Studebaker, or Studebaker dis
tributors or dealers, or affiliated
firms or menibers of their fami
| lies, are not eligible.
| “The prize will be the 1,775,
987th automobile produced in Stu
debaker history.
“The eighty-fourth birthday of
}Studebaker was an event of con
siderable importance in South
Bend. Mayor George W. Freyer
muth led a delegation of civic and
comvr.ercial leaders to the end of
| the assembly line in the factory
j and there congratulated Mr. Hoff
iman. H. S. Vance, and other Stu
debaker executives upon the pres
ent robust health of the famous
corporation. These ceremonies
were broadcast from a South Bend
radio station. At the same time,
| th: ‘loyal owner’ contest was an
“No other automobile company,
in fact but t‘:fig% d can
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]Mirim Fairbanks . . . with a
l SIOO,OOO musical education
lbilly, torch and southern songs.
lShe gave up a job as physical in
structor at the exclusive Foxcroft
school to sing. Whether her new
husband will approve of her musi
| cal career iy still to be seen.
' Alice Hathaway Burrage of the
Boston Beacon Street Burrages
and grand-daughter of a governor
‘of Wyoming is back in Boston «t
ty-four years of continuous pro
~duction.
| Began in 1852
“The Studebaker corporation
had its actual beginning on Feb
ruary 16, 1852, when Henry and
Clem Studebaker set up a wagon
business in South Bend. Their
original capital consisted of two
forges and S6B. The firm was call
ed H. and C. Studebaker and
their business soor became in
volved in producin-. horse-drawn
vehicles, many so.. the wagon
trains that were then plodding
| across the country towards Cali
;tornin. and its treasures of gold.
{ “Shortly after the start of the
| company, John Studebaker joined
ihis brothers. He was of an ad
| venturous spirit and his brothers
| built a Conestoga wagon and pur
ychased his passage to California
with it. In Placerville, Calif.,, John
.Studebaker learned that he could
make quick money by building
wagons, whereas the pursuit of
gold was hazardous and uncer
tain. He elected to build wagons
and in a few short years, he had
saved SB,OOO.
“Returning to South Bend with
his forceful spirit and the SB,OOO,
John joined his brothers and Stu
| debaker began to expand quickly.
During the horse-drawn vehicle
chapter of Studebaker history
more than a million wagons and
buggies were manufactured and
l sold.
At the close of the nineteenth
l century, Studebaker began to build
lautomoblm, In 1802, Studebaker
| built and sold 20 elzctric runa
iboms and trucks. In 1904 the
|of gacoline %.wfii
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
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Mrs. W. R. K. Taylor, jr. : . . .\
- whose singing name is Kathleen
| Barrle |
\
‘present, but she can get a job in
the hot spots any time she wants
one because she really made good.
Heiresg Has SIOO,OOO Voice
Miriam Fairbanks, who is Mrs.
Livingston Fairbanks of Chicago,
l(the cleaning powder not the, scal
es family,) admits that more than
|sloo,ooo was spent on her musical
education. She sifigs light classi
| cal songg at the supper clubs and
‘her society friends lent her such
support ‘that on the night Mus.
Fairbanks opened at the Ambas
sador hotel with Vincent Lopez,
one of them, Mrs. Perry Tiffany,
get foot in a night gpot for the first
time in seven years,
Princess Laura Rospigliosi, the
American Taura Stallo before her
marriage, is not singing but is act
ing as hostess one night a week
at the Ambassador.
Among other young women high
in soclal circles who have had a
fling as supper club singers might
be listed Marjorie Logan, who also
wang in radio, Virginia Uppercu,
TJulie Gillespie and Donna Christ
ina Torlonia (Mrs. Daniel Lord.)
One of the most recent to create a
stir is young Mary Almonte, daugh
ter of Count Almonte, who is known
as plain Mr. Almonte at the Na
tional Broadcasting company where
he is night manager,
“Society girls have to be ag good
as anybody else to succeed these
days,” one supper club proprieto.
confided. “So probably a good
many of them will be going hack
to their teas and bridge. Those
who remain will be professionals
primarily—and society girls sec
ondarily.”
Senior students of Kssex, Eng.
are supplied with free bicyeles if
they live far from school.
It is approximately 900 miles b}
rail petween New York and Chi
cago.
New Mexico hag enough natural
asphalt to pave 8,000,000 miles of
roads.
automobile rolled down the streets
of South Bend to the present day,
the company has made steady
forward strides. The Studebaker
product has always been well
made and popularly as well as
properly priced. The Studebaker
reputation for fair dealing has
been jealously guarded and the
company enjoys a world-wide
goodwill.
During the past 20 years Stu
debaker has scored heavily with
engineering advancements of many
kinds. Innumerable devices to
produce more economical, more
pleasurable, more efficient motor
ing has been introduced to mo
tordom for the first time, many
later becoming standard on all
automobiles. An efficient and bril
liant engineering staff has devel
oped into a group of pace setters
for the entire industry.
Great Asset
Meanwhile Studebaker has fur
nished steady and pleasant jobs
for thousands of men and women
in South Bend and thousands of
others in the world-wide selling
organization. Working conditions
in South Bend are said to be the
bes tin the nidustry and the fidel
ity of the employes to the corpor
ation is considered one of Stude
baker's greatest assets. Genera
tion after generation of South
Bend people march through the
Studebaker history and there are
several instances where grand
father, father and son are in ac
tive service of the corporation.
“The fundamental policy of the
Studebaker brothers has been
zealously maintained throughout
the years,” said Mr. Hoffman in
commentisg upon the- anniver
sary. “When they bogan this
business they announced to the
world that they would build qual
ity products, price them fairly
and deal squarely with every man.
There has never been any change
in this policy. There never will
be.
“The reward of adherence to
this program is found in Stude
baker's present robust health. The
greatest business depression in
world history has passed and
sales are back upon what I might
call a ‘boom time' basis. The Dec
ember-January sixty day period
just passed was the best we have
had in seven years. In fact, we
came within 126 units of equalling
the number of retail deliveries
made during thé same period of
1929 . g
French Woman
- Opens Engineering
E Field to Her Sex
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Mlle. Magie-Louise Paris
By ROSETTE HARGROVE
NEA Service Staff Correspondent
PARIS—Ten years ago, with n¢
capital but plenty of enthusiasm
and ardor, Mademoiselle Marie-
Louise Paris founded her Institute
of Women Electrical Engineers,
the first and only one of its kind
in the world. The Institute was
open to girls of all nationalities.
Under her inspired guidance,
one hundred and fifty girls have
heen graduated from the Institute
with the diploma of engineer.
Bach has obtained a post which
hitherto had either never been
considered compatible with fem
inineg capabilities or had been oc
cupied .by men. i
Science Hitherto Closed to Women
According to this very progres
sive and dynamic French woman
there is no reason why scientific
ability should remain the execlu
sive possession of men. Until the
founded her school, few if any
Frenchwomen were afforded the
advantage of a scientific educa
tion, although many were attract
ed by it. Literature, the arts, and
later on medicine and law wer¢
the only fields open to the sex.
Science, electricity and mechanies
seemed absolutely inacessible. Of
course, there were a few women
li’ke €temence Royer and Ma
dameé Curie; but it was out of the
question to dream of emulating or
even approaching their achieves
ments.
Marie-Louise Paris belongs to
the bourgeoise. Her father was
an officer in the Army and bhe
lieved in a sound education so
his two daughters. They both
studied at the University of Gren
oble and took science as a gide
course, hecause they happened to
be interested.
After the war, the girls were
faced with the problem of earning
their living, as were so many oth
er girls of their social ctanding.
Electrical engineering had a par
ticular appeal for Marie-Louise.
¢oo she continued her studies and
was one of the first women in
France to obtain her engineer's
diploma. Her first job was in a
laboratory where she wag put in
charge of measuring electrical
unist . Later she studied signaling
and secured a post in the signal
station at T.aon, an important
railway junction in Brittany,
Not Competing With Men
“It was never my intention to
train women to compete with
men,” she says. “On the con
tray, my aim ha, always been to
ensure a closer ct laboration be
tween them. Only \hus do T un
derstand progress. But T do think
that woman can play a very im
portant and efficient social part
in the various aspects of indus
trialism, bhesides developing into
an execellent technician.
“The woman engineer can do
much towards introducing the
human element in factory ov
workshop by her daily contact
with the workers. She can do 2
great deal towards attenuating
the over-mechanized side of fac
tory work. And the most com
forting result of my efforts is that
every vear I find the number of
industrialists anxious to secure
the services of my girls increas
ing”
Governor Talmadge
Speaks Wednesday
In Chapel Address
(Continued From Page One)
has been scheduled for Monday.
Boyce F. Martin, assistant to the
dean of the Harvard Business
school, will speak at 12:30 o'clock
to School of Commerce students
on “Opportunities for Business
School Graduates.”
As announced elsewhere, Dr.
James R. Angell. president of
Yale University, will speak fol
lowing an Institute of Public Af
fairs dinner Monday evening. A
rhapel hour for the address could
not be arranged.
Wednesday afternoon Dr. James
N. Brawner, of Hapeville, one of
the state’'s leading psychiatrists,
will address the P ychology clinie.
His subject will be “Diseases of
the Mental Regions of the Brain.”
He will speak in the Psychology
building at 4:30 o’clock.
It was also learned that Ralph
Adams Cram. distinguished archi
tect and author, will be a guest
of the TUniversity March 25.
Cram has been characterized as
a leader of what is known as the
Gothic wing of architecture,
. . ¢ ’ ! . d))
Kitchen Utensils Pan Each Other With *You’re Old Fashioned” as
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Modern Accessories Save Brides From Many Meal-Time Roastings
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New notes in accessories for lthol
modern kitchen: Porcelain con
tainers modeled after Swodhhl
apothecaries jars; exquisite stain
less Bteel and rosewood knives and|
forks; cooking glassware with de-,
tachable handles; and stainless!
steel pots and kettles. At right,l
chintz - designed fabricoid table- |
covers can be matched for shelv-!
ing and curtains to do the kitchen|
up smartly. |
NEW YORK—You see them lH!
all the kitchen gadget dopartmentsl
these days—trim and pretty and]
eager, pick of the season's yo'ung'
housekeepers. For it's the fashion|
to be excited about your kitchen.l
It's smart to buy up all kinds otl
tricky little first aids to turning!
out perfect meals for tired hus- |
bands. |
'And the gadgets themselveg war-i
rant all the charming fuss. F‘orl
they are easy and practical to work
as even the dumbest bride couldl
wish. For instance, instead of
torturing metal into odd shapes,
that only baffle and bewilder the!
brightest of cooks, an effort is be- |
ing made to simplify kitchen uten-i
sils, to use new materials in dld;
forms and to get articles in former- |
ly high-priced materials down to,
the budget level of the averdge |
housewife. Prices of former luxur-'
ies have been cut in half or more.'
Glasswanrs For Use on Flame !
" Any woman would want the new
pyrexware sauce pan that you can
Iput right on a flame. This comés
tin several sizes and has a detach
able handle with a glass, button
ishaped lever. The detachable han
dle not only prevents burned fing
lers, but makeg it possible to use
ithe sauce pan in the oven as well
|as on top of the stove.
Then there is the lifetime stain
‘less steel tea kettle which has potg
ito match. There are more oddly
|shaped tea kettles on the market—
stream-lined, under-sling affalrs
with light wood handles—but for
sheer convenience, I'll take this
one. It holds five quarts, has an
extra-broad top that makes it easy
!to clean and bakelite handles with
'('urves underneath to make it form
fitting to the hand. You'd expect,
with all these super-qualities, that
it would come to a price that only
millionaire housewives could af
ford. But actually it costs no more
than a good aluminum Kkettle,
The double decker casserole made
of cast aluminum can be one or
STATE REPUBLICAN
CONVENTION SETS
CONVENTION DATE
(Continuea From Page One)
ers. said they favored an expres
sion for a candidate.
Presidential choices were not
mentioned, but some Republicans
said Colonel Frank Knox, Chicago
publisher, had strong support in
Georgia. Others talked of Gover
nor Alf Landon of Kansas and
Senator Willlam E. Borap of
Idaho. TFormer President Hoover
has many Georgia friends.
Josiah T. Rose, of Atlanta, state
chairman, presided Saturday. Ja
mes W. Arnold, of Athens, national
committeeman, took a leading
part in discussions. Mrs. Bertha
M. Field, of Marietta, national
committeewoman, was given an
ovation.
County conventions will select
231 delegates to the state meet
ing. Each county was allotted one
delegate and an additional vote to
each 200 ballots cast in the 1932
election.
Sixteen Negrp, comniitteemen
mingled with he 50 or more white
leaders.
Benjamin Davis, Atlanta Negro
who has been powerful in the state
party, led a sveccessful fight
against the election of a comimit
teeman to a vacancy. Later he
was successful in having the time
of county conventions set for noon
rather than 2 o'clock “ro Negroes
would have a better chance to at
tend.” o B
Several republican leaders from
surrounding states had been' ex
pected but jliness prévented their
e et
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two casseroles at will, If you need
a bigger baking dish, there it is.
If you need two smaller ones, there
they are,
We've always had containers for
salt, super and spices, and the
new ones of porcelain differ only
in that they are prettier. They
are white with colored bands and
copied t’ro‘n old Swedish apothe
cary jars. Easier to keep clean
than metal besides being so decor
ative.
Asparagus Steamer is Gem
A new asgparagus steamer with a
lid at the bottom and a five and
a half inch base is set into an open
sauce pan containing about three
incheg of boiling salted water and
your asparagus cooks In steam.
IFRANCE GARRISONS
! NORTHERN FRONTIER
l (Continued From Page One)
i e
!
soldiers were ordered to report to
their posts at once.
Pierre-Etienne Flandin, former
minister, told Great Britain, Bel-
Igium. afnd Italy, as co-signato
iries of the Locarno pact, that
{He-ivhsfouhrcr Hitler had violated
| that treaty.
! He made this declaration
through the three nations’ am
bassadors to Paris and asked them
!to submit it immediately to their
| respective governments.
Official sources were assured
that the German army was taking
up positions at Coblenz, Mainz,
Cologne, and Frankfort, where
Allied soldiers were garrisoned
for the seven years following the
| World War.
| French military expertss said
the French army already is out
numbered by that of Germany.
North Caroline State ' College
has a course in insurance.
The University of Kentucky has
a “How to Study” class.
There are said to be 2,000 cases
vs leprosy in the Unit:d States.
attending. Among these was J.
Leonard Replogle, Floridian whe
received votes for vice president
in the 1932 Chicago convention,
SUNDAY, MARCH 8, 1936,
Finally we come to the knivesd
and forks in the picture, which are
a sort of up-to-date version of the
Marie Antoinette passion for de
luxe implicity. Remember how she
played at being rustic in her quaint
little mill in the palace grounds at
Versailles, all very expensively?
Well, these knives and forks play
at being the old-fashioned wood
en-hendled kitchen kind. But their
handles are really of finest rose
wood and their blades of exquisit
ely tempered steel. Incidentally,
they harmonize beautifully with the
wooden and spun aluminum cheese
trays, Italian and Mexican X pot
tery, wooden salad bowls and oth
er modern party equipment that
vour grandmother’s silver seems
not to fit very well,
Grand Exalted Ruler
- . "
Hallinan to Visit Elks
.
| Lodge in Athens
S ————
(Continued From Page One)
Deputy Grand Exalted Ruler J.
Bush is head, ig actively at work
plauning his reception.
Mr. Bush said Saturday that a
large delegation of prominent Hlks
from Atlanta would accompany
Mr. Hallinan to Athens, and that
a motorcade from Athens would
meet them at Bogart and escore
them into town.
Among the Atlanta Elks to
come over for the day are John
McClelland, Chief * Justice of the
Grand Forum; Charlie Bruce, vice
president of the Georgia State
Elks Association; Frank Robinson,
Exalted Ruler of Atlanta Lodgs
and many others. 5
The party will arrive in Athens
at 11 a. m. and Athens IL.odge
will hold “open house”’” for mem
bers and specially invited guests
to meet Mr. Hallinan. Staté,
county and city officials and the bar
of Athens will Hé¥#iehuded in the
list. W aie
At 1 p. m. all Fafit exalted rulers
and officers of the lodge will en
tertain the Grand Exalted Ruler
and Atlanta guests at a dinner in
the Holman Hotel. Col. M. G.
Michae] will be toastmaster.
Fo)lowivx'l—gfi t;1; dinner Mr. Halli
nan and his party will leave by
train for New York.
Vaccination Notice
All dogs eight (8) weekg of age
and over must be vaccinated
against rabies durisg the month of
March. By order of the Health De
partment, i