Newspaper Page Text
.9*ne2S,lS38
Modern
V'O^tN
Marriages Have No Room
Modem the Policemen Type
for
1 «f Spouse
MARIAN MAYS MARTIN
By discussing marriage, an
We theme no matter from
[enthralling angle it is being considered.
w b*t 1 said that mod
One nf the group
marriages had a much better
gfti succeeding than the mar
chance of
riages 0 f our parents or even our
Why'.’ Because we have learned
own. why” of many things,
to Know 7 the
such as incompatibility, why peo
pie Quarrel why they are not faith
(til, and so on
Another reason is that the old
l, a l].and-chain idea of marriage is
out—that moderns refuse to enter
prison even for one they love. They
e freedom and being free,
L insist on robbed of partic
e agreed us any
ular desire to misuse that privilege.
A possessive woman has caused
many a husband to break away just
to prove to himself he was a free
born individual, with the power
do, 01 not to do, whatever he
,ned In other words, “to show her
* thing or two or “to show who s
boss
More Freedom Today
Wives have a deal more freedom
and leeway than ever before. This
being the case, thy cannot very
well be intolerant of their husbands,
or can they begrudge them the
[privileges they enjoy.
A freer exchange of give and take
makes.for a more comfortable mar
riage. Neither mar. nor woman can
really enjoy life when they are polie
fd by the other. What did you do?
Where did you go? may be idle
questions, or they may be traps.
Better avoid forming the habit of
[asking them. invariably find
[what Suspicious persons
they are looking for and make
Ithemselves, as well as everyone
around them, miserable.
We agreed that while there were
still plenty of jealous men and wo- |
men, these unfortunates had them
selves pretty well under control.' ,
Also, that they had learned to ac
cept as a matter of course, many'
situations that would at one time!
have been considered grounds for
– fuss. That's because there is more |
eandor than formerly between men
and women.
[ “Oh, by the way, I met Joan
[Barclay and took her to lunch,” a
husband will say. Under the old rule
If friend husband had any such
encounter accidental or otherwise,
Jw probably would conveniently have
[forgotten to mention the fact, fear-j
|ng that friend wife might think it
Bar more than casual.
With the business world clutter-;
fed with women, a man hardly can!
pail ptions to which, find himself in some situ-!
under the old regime, I
INSURANCE !
Fire — Wind. Auto
BONt>S t
Consult Us for Rates
LESTER AND SMITH
Insurance Agency i
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SUMMER COMFORT I
'’ r ®P ro «l hotel in th.
of dos-nlown Jacksonville. Every
.a™ *p lh ^ an,i shower, soft water,
I 6rT bed w ' lh innerspring ma(
„ d ,eadin S lamp. Running ice
Wm., °** r «<* ‘very n
00 r.
Crv»- 0CFrA tQP’JLAR PRICED
a LOUNGE and COFFEE SHOP
Oj 1 *' I- 8- PO UND Hotel*
ho tel patten Y HOTEL DESOTO
Lkottan Savannah
SUMMER DIVERSIONS AT RAINBOW LAKE!
Bowling — Boating — Swimming —■ Dining
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WllNt r V m x ’A T v > 1
Alleys ! •n superb On a lake of scenic Suits furnished if Chicken and Steak j
condition. New beauty. desired. Private Dinners. Deliciou* j !
nes . be .
'ng added. Shady banks. lockers. Life guard, sandwiches. !
DANCING TO THE BEST MUSIC!
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Maurice Costello
Broke; Maurice Costello, one-time
matinee idol of the screen, sues his
daughter Dolores, screen actress,
for $200 a month support. Cos
tello assarted she is living com
fortably in a $50,000 home John
Barrymore gave her when she di
vorced him a few years ago. Miss
Costello has been supporting him,
but recently cut him off, the fa
ther asserted. Miss Costello's
friends said her income had de
creased lateiy. The former actor
is 61.
not have developed. It's "old
to fly into a jealous rage
one's wife or husband
momentarily involved in an
situation.
Marriage Not a Prison
People still talk, but not about the
things that once kept their
wagging. Married couples
not supposed to be so absorbed
one another that they cannoi
the friendship of friends of
sexes.
Bachelors no longer hesitate to
Hie Scene J * «*
HOLLYUIOOD <* pi 1
By HARRISON CARROLL
Featnres Copyright, Syndicate. loss Inc.
King
HOLLYWOOD—Lights! Camera 1
In the same prize
where Max
and
once battled
the M. G. M
cameras, Robert
Taylor is mix
ing it for "The
Crowd Roars”.
The ring has
been dug out of
the prop room
and set up in
one of the
studio’s largest
Taylor sound stages.
Robert Several hundred
extras, sitting
it and the camera, have
watching Taylor fight various
since 9 a.m.
It is now 3 p. m. Taylor is
up there.
Of course, the professional
have been pulling their
yet there arc always some
slip through. The mere
alone, over this period of
is no cinch. Taylor is in con
or he couldn't do it.
He really makes quite a good
as a fighter. His
are too stocky and, natu
he is too good looking. But
is well muscled.
This particular shot shows
being knocked against the
getting up and trying to
himself against a barrage of
rained by Patsy Perronie.
They shoot it and the blows go
and on.
“The bell! the bell!” shouts Di
Dick Thorpe.
exc ' ternent » fhe actor sup
to ring the bell ending the
has forgotten his cue.
Director Thorpe has to conserve
strength so he can fight
rest of the afternoon.
"What are you trying to do ?"
yells. “Frame my boy?”
Watching all this in makeup, is
O’Sullivan. She hates the
has seen only one in her
Horrified then by a knockout,
put her program up to cover
face.
There was a tooth on it
On a set representing a ship's
Hollywood's new dis-
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Dolores Costello
marry because marriage threatens j
an end to their fun. When they
hesitate, it is because of money, or
rather the lack of it.
Everyone knows it is the young
married set m any town that has
the gayest time. Even when some
of them are over-zealous in prov
ing to the world that marriage is
no longer a prison—and not the
end of things but the beginning
one forgives them because of the
missionary work they are doing.
Older folk insist that moderns do |
1 covery, Arleen Whelan, is
[ with Raymond Walburn.
j They are making a scene for
,, Ellis island”, in which Arleen
pi a yg an Irish girl who come* as
an immigrant to the United States
i n this scene, she is en route and
Don Ameche and Gladys George
I have dressed her in smart clothes,
smU ggi e d her up to have a good
t ime with the first class pas
sen „ ers
| ! she is suppoS ed to be thrilled
and this is easy J for, in real life
just now, Arleen is like Cinderella
at the ball.
She teils me, after the scene is
over, that she didn't sleep a wink
after the preview of "Kidnaped”.
She is living on excitement.
“It's like a dream playing this
scene,” she says, “I’ve never owned
an evening gown like this and I’ve
never been on an ocean liner. In
fact, I’ve never been east of
Colorado.”
The Whelan lass, incidentally, is
a genuine carrot-top. She has
tiny red freckles on her forearms
—sturdier arms than you usually
see on a Hollywood actress.
You. never saw so many foreign
ers as on “The Great Waltz” set
at M. G. M Julien Duvivier, the
dLector, and Fernand Gravet are
from France. Luise Rainer and"'
Miiiza Korjus are from Vienna,
Gottfried Reinhardt is from Ger
many.
Miss Rainer and Gravet, of
course, know English well enough S
Korjus, to think in though the language, she speaks but Miss her j
;
lines clearly,
has not devel
M oped this knack.
It is amusing
to see how one
particular scene
is shot
Duvivier
wants to in
struct Miss
P5 Korjus to read on a line. how
He turns to.
S Gottfried Retn-t
Rainer J hardt and ex-j
Luise plains his;
wishes t n i
French Reinhardt then turns to/
Miss Korjus and translates them
into German. And she, thinking
in German, then comes out with'
the line in English.
THE COVINGTO N NEWS'-
- BITS OF -
Southern
Sunshine
By Mrs. Henry Odum
It is strange that no matter how
green or rich our heritage may be,
we are never satisfied, feeling that
the pastures and the fields “over
yonder” are greener, our minds
wander out into the unknown, and
we wish—
If I could swiftly soar as an eagle
wings
I would richer be than rulers, counts
or kings.
Neither the sanded plains, the sea
the sky
Would be uncharted, if I could fly!
I would love to soar above the bil
lows blue
See if my childhood dreams of
clouds were true.
And far above the ice-clad moun
tain peak
I would stop—and hear the silence
speak, ■»
And with the four winds dance and
race
Then clouds would hold me in their
cool embrace.
Beyond blue horizon—I would soft
ly croon
Melodies for His majesty—in the
moon.
I d rock in the moon, hold wee
horns of gold
And sail cloud highways the world
to behold!
I'd call to the stars at close of the
day
And gently rock down the bright
milky way.
I would hunt for the rainbow s lost
pot of gold
And prove the old legend that's oft
en been told—
Of how the rainbow colors, dip and
blend
In a pot of gold buried at the end.
Wearying of the violet rays beyond
the blue
I would fly with tired heart dear
to YOU!
: not take marriage seriously. But
j [old they should admit that taken with the
order marriage was too
j seriously—or must obey at and least that command. idea that
one one
Some "Swell” Sandwiches
"Swell” is slang bot it’s the word
the family applies to sandwich fill
ings brightened with bananas. Try
bananas with your favorite sand*
wlch filling butter a slice of bread,
cover with banana slices. Spread
Tour second slice of bread with
chosen filling and put sandwich to
I Set her Recommended combina
| Uon8 deviled ham and banana
I ahce8 ' cream cheese and Jam with
banana slices, peanut butter and
bana " a * Hc ?' salmon
i ' nanas. mixed together ZJ** with mayon- U '
naise.
Now They’ll Drink Milk!
Children cheer the necessary
glass of milk when it's in a "shake”
made with bananas To make this
“regular soda fountain special" at
home, just slice a fully ripe banana
(yellow peel flecked with brown)
into a bowl and beat with a rotary
egg beater until creamy (or press
banana through a medium wire
mesh strainer with a spoon) Add a
cup of cold milk and mix until
creamy Serve very cold
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BETROTHED — Lovely Princess
Fawzia, 17-year-old sister of
King Farouk of Egypt, whose
engagement to Shahpur Moham
med Riza Pahlavi, 19, Crown
Prince of Iran, was recently an
nounced. An official Iranian del
egation arriving in Alexandria
to confirm the betrothal was to
be dined at banquets for which
Egypt appropriated $30,000.
P'AGfe ffVE
vT *–'■
-3\ v £
T /o>
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♦ o r /£
SULTANA
REU CIRCLE PEANUT BUTTER 2 1-LB. 25c
COFFEE KETCHUP ANN PAGE JARS 7c
2 BAGS l-LB. 35. ANN PAGE—(Except Strawberry 8-OZ. and BOTTLE______ Raspberry)
PRESERVES 1-LB. JAR___________ 15c
ARMOUR’S OR WILSON'S ANN PAGE STRAWBERRY AND RASPBERRY
CORNED
BEEF PRESERVES JAR 1-LB. 17c
NO. 1 15c MARMALADE ANN PAGE 1-LB iH
CAN ORANGE JAR
ANN PAGE PORK AND GRAPEJUICE A. – P. 2 PINTS CM
BEANS SALMON SULTANA NO. 1 TALL CM
RED CAN
l-LB. CAN 5c CHEESE WISCONSIN, LB. 17c
GELATIN DESSERTS, PUDDINGS AND ICE CREAM DESERTS
ANN PAGE CHILI SPARKLE 4 PKGS. FOR 15c
SAUCE WESSON OIL PINT 21c
2 8-OZ. 19c PICKLES ALABAM’ GIRL SWEET 22-OZ. 15c
BOTS. MIXED or SWEET PLAIN JAR
JUICE IONA 3 24-OZ. 25c
HAMPSTEAD’S EARLY JUNE TOMATO CANS
PEAS FRESH
A. – P PRUNES 2 NO. 2Vt 25c
CANS
2 NO. CANS 2 15c VINEGAR HEINZ WHITE 13c
OR CIDER, PINTS
CRISCO,’ CHIPSO Small, 2 for 19; Lge. 23c
1-Lb. Can 21; 3-Lb. Can 57c
FRUITS AND CALO____ CAT AND DOG FOOD ____3 1-Lb Can* 25c
VEGETABLES SCOTTTOWELS 3 Rolls 25c
SUPER SUDS, Octagon,— 3 Pkgs. 25c
KOOL-AID _________ Pkg. 5c
New Cobbler Potatoes 5 Lbs. 13 c NECTAR ORANGE PEKOE
TEA, i/ 2 Lb. Pkg.______ CN|
CHEESE, N. Y. State, Lb. _ CN|
California Lemons, Doz. . 19 e MILK, WHITEHOUSE 4 Tall EVAPORATED Cans______ 25c
California Oranges, Doz. CREAMERY, FRESH PRINT
BUTTER, 1-Lb. Print____ 31c
.
15' IONA
Tomatoes, Fresh . 2-Lbs. WHEAT CORN, Sweetened, 3 No. 2 Cans 25c
GEORGIA KRISPIES, Kellogg’s, 10-oz. Pkg. 10c
WATERMELONS, _ _ Lge. _ Ea. err POST’S
BRAN FLAKES, 2 10-oz. Pkgs. 21c
SUCCOTASH, Stokely’s, No. 2 Can 15c
GOLDEN RIPE c-n ARGO SLICED
Bananas, 3-Lbs..... ANN PEACHES, PAGE 3 Picnic Cans 25c
WHITE OR PEANUT BUTTER, 8-oz. Jar___10c
Yellow Onions, Lb. cn SOAP, Lux or Lifebuoy, 3 Cakes —19c
. . .
A-PENN and , Pint----29c A–P MEAT SPECIALS
INSECTICIDE, Sprayer 1
SODA CRACKERS, 1-Lb. Box----__ 10c
TISSUE, FASTIDIA 3 Pkgs. of 300 Shts. 25c FANCY QUALITY
YUKON CLUB BLUE TAG BEEF
BEVERAGES, 29-oz. Bot. __ 10c
QUEEN ANNE 80----ISc ROUND CHUCK
\APER NAPKINS, 2 Pkgs. of
jWEETENED OR UNSWEETENED STEAK 29c ROAST 19c
GRAPEFRUIT JUICE, 3 No. 2 Cans __ 25c u.. lb.
DER MONTE LARGE WHITE
ASPARAGUE TIPS. Picnic Can 17c
A–P SLICED OR CRUSHED SWIFT'S SMOKED PEANUT HOCKLESS
LIBBY’S PINEAPPLE, OR ARMOUR'S No. 1 Flats---- Va Cans----10c 9c PICNICS lb. ______18c
POTTED MEATS, 3 No.
OLIVES, IONA PLAIN 6%-oz. QUEEN Bot._______ 17c BEEF STEW, Rib or Brisket, Lb.
JANE PARKER CENTER CUTS
PECAN ROLLS, 6-oz. Pkg. . 10c PORK SHOULDER, Roast __ Lb. Oi O
OLD LUCKY GOLD, STRIKE, RALEIGH, CHESTERFIELD CAMEL, RIB VEAL CHOPS _________Lb. h CD O
CIGARETTES, Pkg. ________ 15c VEAL SHOULDER STEAK _ Lb. CnI CO O
LARD BACON, SUNNYFIELD Ga. Slic. Rind Off__Lb. cni LO O
— PURE — — JEWEL — BACON, Sliced Rind Off __ Lb. to CflWtO
4-Lb. Cart. 41c 4-Lb. Cart.__42c PAN TROUT, Va. Dressed Lb. *-*
8-Lb. Cart. 81c 8-Lb. Cart. __ 83c CROAKERS, Va. Red Fin __ 4 Lbs. to
FLOUR _
SUNNYFIELD IONA
48 24 CORN Lbs______$1.47 Lbs. 75c FLAKES 24 48 Lbs. Lbs. $1.25 65c DRY SALT MEAT
FAT 9c FANCY 15c
2 SUNNYFIELD 12° BACKS Lb. BELLIES, Lb.
— 8-oz. Boxes
A–P FOO J STORES