Screenland (Nov 1928-Apr 1929)

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SCREENLAND It is not surprising that Redskin and Cornblossom fell in love with each other, which is another thing their people do not like. Things arc going pretty badly for them both when Tully Marshall and Larry Steers burst in to say that the oil Richard found has been registered in his name. Redskin promptly turns over half of the vast fortune that is now his to his tribe which makes him quite the cat's whiskers once more. Ruth and I sat under an umbrella with Elizabeth Pickett and heard all about the exciting time she had getting the material for "Redskin" which she wrote four years ago. She loves the Indians and spent many months among them studying their manners and customs and getting an understanding of them. And she does understand them. Richard wandered up between scenes and told us about an interesting thing he had seen. He was out duck shooting at dawn and lying flat on his stomach on the edge of a cliff. He noticed an Indian man and woman far below on the plain but took no notice of them at first. Then he became aware that they were staging a love scene "I felt a little mean because they of course thought they were alone, but I had heard that Indians did not kiss and it looked to me as though whatever they did in place of kissing was about to be done. I couldn't resist watching — and besides I was so far away that if I ever saw them again I wouldn't know what they looked like Well, the Indian put his arm around his girl and he did kiss her, just as we kiss, and then they went into the hogan. That afternoon we broke camp and went the 92 miles back to Gallup. The drivers had to make two and three trips to get the whole company transported, the last car arriving at El Navajo Hotel about 5 A.M. The tents and equipment went the 200 miles between camps in the trucks and in 24 hours from the time they left Chin Lee the tents were up and the outfit slept in them The first dinner was complete as far as edibles went but the tools to eat them with were shy. Everyone reverted to type and used the implements nature supplied for such an extremity and we all got along very nicely. Tully Marshall did not come with us to the Mesa location. His work in the picture was finished so he went back to Los Angeles from Gallup. He rode from Chin Lee in the same car Ruth and I did and kept us laughing over his funny jokes. He told us about Harry, the man who does the camber work at camp. Harry surprised him one morning by telling him that he remembered a Shakesperian play Mr_ Marshall had been in years ago m Harrys home town in Michigan. He knew the names of every principal in the cast and could quote from all the Shakesperian plays and Sonnets. Mr. Marshall tried him out by quoting several obscure lines himselt, whereupon Harry said, "Oh, that's all right too. That's from 'The Tempest, Act II Scene I." It developed that Harry's father owned the local paper and Harry, a young man then, did a good deal of reporting for it. But such are the mysteries of lite that, after many travels, Harry is perfectly happy in his work with Mr. Anderson's camps. He gets a good salary, comes in contact with interesting people, and keeps active and young at heart. The new camp, unlike the old one, was right against the railroad so that water could be easily gotten, there not being time to drill. The location was eighteen miles from camp so we had quite a ride morning and evening. The first night we were there, there was great excitement outside of our tent. We rushed out to find half a dozen men standing about, and Ken Whitmore clapped a box down over a rattling, writhing thing on the ground. I didn't have to be told that we had caught our first rattler. I don't remember who got it from under the box and killed it, but Eve's tempter was the topic of conversation for the evening. Next morning Richard told us he banged his boots so hard on the floor to see if there were snakes in them that Victor Schertzinger, who had the next tent, called, "Come in!" It was grey and threatening that first morning. Richard came to breakfast with a bath towel wrapped around his neck for a muffler. He said he was something like an ostrich. If his neck was warm he was warm all over. Work was impossible for that day. A snow storm seemed nearer than anything else, and at that time of the year at nearly a 7000 foot altitude you can never be sure what you will get. Something had to be done, though, so every man in the place took turns at the limited number of^ shovels and to the rousing camp tune of "There's a Fallen Arch for Every Heel on Broadway" (Music by Schertzinger, words by Dix) a diamond was cut to the left of the plaza between Mr. Schertzinger's tent and the doctor's in preparation for a ball game. Oh, yes, there was a doctor. Dr. James Doyle; but he didn't have a great deal to do because no one was hurt except one lad who was kitchen helper. He dropped a cake of ice when they were moving from Chin Lee camp, and broke his foot, but the doctor had already started for the Mesa when he arrived in Gallup so the foot was set at the Gallup Hospital. I peeked out of our tent which Elizabeth Pickett and Jane Novak invited us to share with them, to see how the diamond was getting on, and there was Richard, done up in a big brown overcoat and straw hat, carrying a stove in one hand and its pipe in the other. The sight of him was so comical that next morning when the sun was out I had a picture taken of him. That is just the way he looked around at me when I checked his determined effort to furnish his tent with warmth. Of course we all got stoves, and being the star Richard's would have been the first one put in, but that's what makes him so popular, he is always one of the boys' and ready to carry his own. And then everyone got into the game, the women cheering on the side lines, and when the California Limited rolled by about 300 feet from the diamond, the blase occupants of the observation car •little dreamed that they were gazing at a $15,UUU. base ball game. That's what that game cost Mr. Lasky and Mr. Zukor. $15 000. a day it costs them to maintain the Kedskin" company on location, salaries inclusive, and a day of work lost is just the Boss' hard luck. In the afternoon almost everyone went walking, and the walk Elizabeth Pickett picked for herself led to a horse caught in the quicksand. She and her companion worked over him and it so happened that Tane Novak saw him too and came back for aid. They took ropes and a truck and all the men left the camp and went to the rescue. The poor animal had given up hope, and sunk to above the shoulders seemed resigned to its fate. With shovels the mire about it was dug away and a rope placed around its belly. Then came the