RICHMAN-MERRILL SET NEW YORKLONDON MARK Wir/,ing out over Atlantic at start of flight to London, plane piloted by Dick Merrill bears Harry Itichman, stage and night club iinger, toward London after takeoff from Floyd Bennett Air- port, Xew York. Plane landed at South Wales in less than sixteen hours, setting new mark for ocean crossing. BISHOP OF LONDON HERE Drum Majoress Champ ^a^'fai Bound for Toronto, where he baptized two great-grand nephews and see many relatives. Right Rev. Right Hon. F. .\. Win- nington-Ingrani, Bishop of London, Kng., passed through .Montreal. The picture above was taken at the Bonaventure Station as he wait- ed between trains. .\.s champion drum majoress, lovely Priscilla Eveleth will lead- Winter Haven, Fla., champion drum corps in Cleveland conven- tion. She's wearing a wreath des- nigating rank. Ciark Gable Serves Up Some Hollywood Facts Little Known Facts About Fihn Stars ; Ruth Chatterton Once Lived On 20 Cents a Day; Ronald Colman Arrived in New York With $37 Br CUrk GaUtf HOLLYWOODâ€" I jot down some interesting facts I have learned about my friends and motion picture as- sociates, hoping they will bo as new to you as thej were to me. And I've had a lot of fun getting this material together. Lionel Barrymore once supported a mutt dog in an animal picture. Norma Shearer's smiling face is the same one framed by an automobile tire in those early ada. "Time to Re- tire." Madge Evans was the little girl who sat on a' cake of sOfap once upon a time in the ads that asked you, "Have You a Little Fairy in Your Home?" Marion Davies was the model for Howard Chandler Christy's famous palling, "Morning," and Mar- '.ene Dietrich was training to be a concert violinist in Germany until an injury to her hand changed her profession. John Barrymore never walks under a ladder and never looks at the moon over his left sLoulder. Ronald Col- man arrived in New York from Eng- land with a capital of $37. But his luck has changed since those days. Constance Bennett is an ardent fight fan, but always covers her eyes when a fighter is knocked out. Sylvia Sid- ney reads books on medicine and can name every bone on your body, and Ruth Chatterton, now at the top of her profession, once lived en 20 cents a day while looking for work during leaner years. Mr. George -Arliss takes two lumps of sugar and lemon in his afternoon tea. Mary Pickford never sits at the head of her own table when she entertains at dinner. Harold Lloyd ig a member of the Magicians' Club and can do one hundred card tricks. Tom Mi.x worked as a target for a icuife- thrower when he was only 7 years old. Roland Young was named .»fter grand- mother's pet Canary, which died the day he was born. Gloria Swanson when she was broke, borrowed enough money to hire a private railway car so she could arrive in California in style and impress the natives, and Charlie Chaplin, who began as a pie- thrower in comedies, refused to appear at a command performance before the Kin^ and Queen of England. It often amused me to watch the pet economies of some of the screen stars. Bill Powell, for instance, saves rubber bands. Bob Mont- gomery always shaves himself. Groucho Marx smokes a "prop" cigar while at work. Dudley Digges has worn the same tweed suit in eight pictures. Nelson Eddy learned to sing by listening to phonograph rec- ords. Nat Pendelton has worn the same artificial gardenie for the last two years. Director Richard Bol- pslawski takes his own lunch to work. Lots of the stars have their birth- days on holidays. For intance. Mar- ion Davies' birthday is on New Year's Day. Stuart Erwin's falls on Val- entine's Day. Wallace Beery's on April Fools' Day. Robert Young's on Washington's Birthday. Vincent Burnett's on the Fourth of July. Pat O'Brien and Roland Y'oung's on .Arm- istice Day and Helen Twelvetrees .on Christmas. The "Gay'' Nineties' R. M. Harrison, Windsoi Star columnist, wonders with a good many other people why the nine- ties were ever considered "gray." ADVANCE U NDER FIRE r ''V ,. ,*^- ^ -^t*^ *^-^««-C-^ »r â- ♦iSiJ^' Certainly it -.annot have been be- eaoae of the daring nature of the bathing attire of that period for that affected by women and giria was as follows, according to Mr. Harrison: "As a foundation, the young woman who would take a jamp in the lake donned a corset. Over that, a flannel blou.se of black with a wide sailor collar buttoned close to the chin, and sleeves to the elbow. The collar had a thin edg- ing of white. Otherwise, the co»- tuni« was deeply melancholy. There were stockings to be sure â€" one function of the corset was to hold 'era up. Over the stockings were loose and baggy bloomers of Heavy wool, pleated at the top so that they' added three thicknesses of cloth around the waist' and hips. Orar, the bloomers was a skirt that hanci well below the knees to the tops ofj the high-laced bathing shoes. And the head was encased in a cap of heavy black silk." â€" (Brockville Re- corder. ) Four Pair of Twins In Four Years Is Surely a Record Portn^uf Couple Have Had Thirteen Children in Eight Years â€" Eleven Cribs In One Room. POITNEUF, Que. â€" Mrs. Phillipe Frenette of Portneuf probably regrets she does not live in Toronto where she would be an outstanding candidate in the $500,000 Millar will baby race. Married eight years to a local mer- chant, Mrs. Frenette last week grave birth to her 12th and 1.3t.h.chikl, both boys. Toronto mothers with 10 child- ren in 10 years stand a good chance of winning the Millar "stork derby." Twins are not new to Mr. and Mrs. Frenette. They have had four pairs in the past four years and five since they were married. The newest have been named Michel and Marcel and at present are the pride of the family. Michel weigh; six pounds eight ozs., while his larger brother weighs seven pounds nine ounces. Age Oft am I by the women told, "Poor Anacreon! thou growest old; Look! how thy hairs are falling all; Poor Anacreon, how they fall!" â€" Whether I grow old or no, By the effects I do not know. But this I know, without being told, 'Tis time to live, if I grow old; 'Tia time short pleasures now to tak« Of little life the best to make And manage wisely the last stake. Anacreon (trans. -Abraham Oow- ey.) No Today HOLL'YWOOD, â€" After sober r». flection Freddie Bartholomew d^ cided today there is no such tUa(>, s today. The child actor though the inai- ter through after talking earlier tli! the week with Japanese mo\-io aud-' ences by trans-pacific te!ephon«. It was Monday night in Hollywood •â- lien he |Spoke, Tuesday noon ia apan. SURVIVERS OF BENMAPLE \''ne:i t.-.o b;;^ i-. â- ,...:! pa.-it:.^'.;- ..:'.>;r La:';iyct:e eras.'.-.: ;..'.J the freighter Benmaple in the St. Lawrence recently, the Canadian boat sank so quickly that the crew was lucky to be saved. In our picture, left, is First Oifiegr Callup. of the Ber.nniple .who was trapped in the cruslici wheelhoiiso and had t") climb thio;igh the roof. Ho was not badly ^injured. With him i- the Benmapie's chief steward, who escaped injury. One man went down with the ship. SPANISH SPTP TNj vo>n"PFAL Loyalist troops surge forward against rebels as latter attacked Iruin. northern Madrid outpost city, center of bloodrest combat In Spani.<h civil war. Shellfire from rebels took huge toll among loya lists. Fall «t city is imminent. The first Spanish ship to visit .Montreal in many years was the Garcia and Diaa Line vessel, Navemar. Reporters and others were banned from the ship. Captain Emmanuel .Martinez, who cannot ^peak a word of English, and hardly a syllable of French, is shown in the inset. The Navamar cleared for South .America. with news print. Aâ€" 3