VOLUME 59 NUMBER 319—40 PAGESSec-Me-1 milNams”inyear, s will ontin-Corn-more for vhichre to t the11 theRuskntici-•moilihiftscivil-SA1matedmonst)“WeswarrrSaigondemonliticalprovalTheBACK THENAs a silent screen star.LAST MARCH\l her last interview.theitarythis[toil’sConguallythmkipedeEthelsilentClaytonmoreand n hunger/75star/diesmnaraScreen heroines come and go, March, she told a Press-Courier but to the people who knew reporter: viEthel Clayton best, there hardly -Mj hie has berm satisfying, j™*?. will be another just like her Movie-making was work Five ^ Her death yesterday, at 82. weeks on the job - a ^ another po!''ec poke came as a shock to those inti-i niovie was finished No hair- * nfer- mate few, dressers or wardrobe people. I ,r‘inQuiet, religious, loving, she fixed my oun hair. Bought ni wildsensespe-for1 paid small heed to what the pub- own wardrobe. Made up my own .her fabulous face. 1 get more help right here p.^ican I lie bowed to beauty.TOP RANKd at alsofrom the nurses (she was in a „ convalescent home at the time)In her heyday in the movie than I did as a star.”highbv Joli his world of the Roaring Twenties,P.Hies the nza98 inYesterday at 11 a.m., the end on jan{ there were those who said she came, in St. John’s Hospital. rajn,s“outlooked” even America’s! Quietly. ; At EAt the James A. Reardon Mor- mv jSweetheart, Mary Pickford. Shetne was in the same salary bracket {uarVi where she was taken. fu-nr,)bat za* with Pickford, Gloria Swanson. ncraj arangements were an- |lo s ---- ” -r---- 71Marguerite Clark and the rest, pounced last evening. A Requiem de She was tops. Mass will be celebrated at 11,nlt;j‘e One day back in the '30s, she a.m. Tuesday in St. Anthony’s niI,‘ said, “The glamour is wonder- Catholic Church. Oxnard. Bur-fend fwas nesomeful. I enjoy all of it. But 1 have la| will be in Ivy Lawn Ceme- and w utly enough money to take care of) tery. Threlack myself, and I feel like slipping \ brother with whom she lived Rachalt;in awav for awhile “QUIET LIFEviet The “awhile,” as it turned out, Viet i lasted for a long, long time, and rad- she spent most of what she liked ks to think was the greater part C’iet of her life living quietly in theting countryside of Ventura County.In an interview just lastin Thousand Oaks before com- steven ing to Oxnard a couple years aj[ a]sago. onetime actor Donald Clay- Bagiev ton Bloom, died shortly before carlthat A cousin Mrs. Vincent Rjchar Sullivan, will mourn her pass-1 Terry ing in Flushing, N Y Miss Clay- her, F ton had spent her last content- and(Continued on Page 3.) t0 jg J The -at Cas