Wednesday, February 28, 2024

Local Movie Pleases Big Audiences

 The Marietta Daily Times, July 24, 1928

Marietta had a real Hollywood setting for its first local comedy movie that was shown at the Hippodrome theatre on Monday afternoon and evening. Large crowds attended the showing of "Marietta's Hero," with Tom Battin, Alice Yost, Frank Buckley, Orien Hiett, Howard Clark and Roma Morgenstern as the principal characters in the United Photoplay Producers picture, the scenario acted and filmed under the direction of Corey Cook last week.

All of the local people, including scores of citizens who were incidental actors in the picture, played their parts well. Tom Battin, the hero, as Jimmy Ryan, the policeman, was exceptionally good, his action in the plot bringing him into many scenes, one of which was the thrilling capture of a bandit who robbed Wittlig's jewelry store.

The Times had a part in the picture, the newspaper a medium for the broadcasting of events, as they were acted. The scenes in the picture were followed up closely by the reporter-actor, Howard Clark, who landed the scoop for the paper in reporting the robbery that was important enough to require an "extra." The film early in the scenes showed him loafing on the job in the news room when he was virtually "kicked out" by Editor Tom O'Donnell, who started him out on his beat.

There was plenty of comedy and romance. The scenes were laid in different parts of Marietta, the "Anchorage," the home of Edward McTaggart, entering largely into the setting. The plot was thrilling. The acting centered about Mr. and Mrs. Henry Jones, played by Frank Buckley and Miss Orien Hiett, the first scene the rear dooryard of the McTaggart home, the home of Jones the hen-pecked husband, and wife. He has a letter from a cousin who is leaving for South America, stating that she is sending "Baby Mary" to him on the next train. Difficulties begin when he goes to the Pennsylvania railroad station for the baby.

Arriving on the same train with the "baby" (who is a grown-up flapper acted by Alice Yost) is "Lizzie Wiggins" (Roma Morgenstern), a cousin of Mrs. Jones. In the meantime Jones, after meeting Jimmy Ryan and the reporter in front of Beagle's drug store, goes down Putnam Street with the policeman and in front of the Corner drug store he is introduced to John Boyle, who gives the policeman a nice fat cigar which he pockets. The trio are seen going down Front Street to the Marietta Furniture store where Jones buys a baby buggy for "Baby Mary's" transportation home.

The scene at the Pennsylvania station was climaxed when "Baby Mary" makes herself known to Jones and the pair walk off for a look over the city. Lizzie Wiggins, with her roller skates in hand, was amazed to see Mary walking away with her cousin's husband, and hastens to tell Mrs. Jones of her "chicken chasing" husband. 

The hen-pecking wife and her cousin on roller skates go after the pair whom they spy on Front Street, below the railroad track. Jones and "Baby Mary" run up Greene Street to Seventh, dodging up by the Chair Company plant and "Goebel Place," where they are followed by the irate wife.

Jones and "Baby Mary" finally get down on Greene Street, where in order to get away from Mrs. Jones, he buys an automobile in which he starts up Front Street. Mrs. Jones and Lizzie get Raymond Lane, of the Lorentz garage, to drive them after the fleeing Jones. The chase leads along City Park, up Sacra Via and down Third. A rube in overalls (Francis Seeley), who is standing in Sacra Via park, is scraped by Mrs. Jones' car and he loses his overalls. 

The chase ends at Second and Putnam streets, where the new car of Jones is smashed in a collision with the bandit car. There the climax of the picture takes place. Jimmy, the policeman, and the reporter are on the job and, with the arrest of the bandit, the reporter writes his story, a second scene in The Times editorial rooms.

The bandit, "Deck" Davis, is seen coming out of the Wittlig store covering everyone with his "gat." He holds up John Boyle and commandeers his automobile. John takes a passing car and gives chase, along with the policeman, and everything and everybody is rounded up at the wreck scene.

Following the family reconciliations, the scenes shift to the stage of the Hippodrome. Mrs. Jones sends "Lizzie" to be cleaned up at the St. Clair beauty parlor. The scenes then shift to The Anchorage, where Clark calls on "Baby Mary." The loaded cigar that had been given by the policeman to the reporter is innocently handed to Jones, as is also The Times, with the glaring headlines about the robbery. While Clark is courting Mary, the cigar explodes, and the reporter is kicked out, and seen tumbling end over end down the terrace of the McTaggart premises. The policeman slips in and courts Mary while Lizzie lets Clark know that "she might let him pay her board."

Wednesday, February 21, 2024

Pianoforte, Furniture &c.

The Marietta Intelligencer, September 10 1846

N. Cram will offer at his residence at Private Sale from 2 to 4 o'clock P.M. on the two last days of this week, being about to relinquish House Keeping.

Pianoforte, High Post Bed Steads, screw & swelled beams, low and Cot beams, Dining and Breakfast Tables, Carpets, Wash Stands, large hair Mattress, Looking Glasses, Mahogany hair-cloth stuffed Easy Chair, Nurse Chair, Scroll top Grecian cane bottomed Chairs, Side Saddle, Cook Stove, Copper Boiler &c. "Cook's favorite," Iron Ware, Hot Air Stove with Urn, Sett Bed Curtains, hair covered Sofa Bed, Barrel Molasses, Bag Coffee, 1/2 barrel Sugar, 1/4 barrel No. 2 Mackerel, &c. 

Terms Cash under $100, over that sum, six months satisfactory notes.

  

Wednesday, February 14, 2024

Education in Marietta

 Marietta Gazette, February 28, 1835

Marietta, at this time, affords advantages for educating the young and rising generation, equal to any town of its size in the great west. We have a regularly incorporated College, on the manual labor system, with able and experienced professors, and well attended by scholars. A Female Seminary, the teachers in which it would be supererogation in us to praise. A school under the management of the Rev. J. T. Wheat, the worthy pastor of the Episcopal Church; and several common schools, all of which are in successful operation.

The town is healthy, boarding cheap, and the society equally moral and intelligent with that of any town. Parents and guardians would no doubt find it greatly to their interest to examine the seminaries of learning in Marietta before sending their children and wards to any other place. The Ohio river, and two or three different lines of stages, give all the requisite means of conveyance for those who wish to come from distant parts of the country.


Wednesday, February 7, 2024

County Jail Empty Only Once in Last Four Years

 Marietta Daily Times, December 14, 1922

Seventeen prisoners took breakfast on Thursday morning at the county jail and immediately thereafter John W. Britton, a bootlegger, was given a new pair of shoes and his liberty. He kept his agreement to leave Washington county and took the first train for Chillicothe where his home is located. Britton was arrested in a raid staged at Reno one night last summer and had served an even four months in jail. He was sent up by Mayor Sandford.

Eight of the seventeen men and boys in jail on Thursday morning are doing time for violating the different provisions of the Crabbe act and a majority of them have been sent over from the court of the mayor. Fred "Blinky" Hendershot is the "dean of the prison," having been confined for almost six months. He was sent up by Mayor Sandford on the 26th of June and his time will not be up until some time in February, if he serves it all.

When Sheriff Roberts came into office four years ago, the outgoing sheriff turned over to him seventeen prisoners. Within a few days that number was reduced and on Thanksgiving Day of 1920 the prison was entirely empty and the big doors stood open. They continued that way for two weeks, during which Sheriff Roberts spent several days at his Waterford township farm. Then the juvenile court committed a delinquent boy to the jail and it is recalled that he made a vain attempt to destroy the courthouse and jail by setting fire to his bed.

From that until the present time the prison never has been empty and the number of prisoners has fluctuated, dropping to a bare half-dozen, then climbing back to seventeen. About a year go, on the day that Sheriff Roberts took a party of eight boys to the Mansfield reformatory, the number of prisoners on the books mounted to eighteen, but several of them did not enter the jail, merely coming to the sheriff's office to surrender. Therefore, seventeen is the high record for the past four years - a number that has been twice attained.