Indianapolis Times, Volume 37, Number 59, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 July 1925 — Page 4
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The Indianapolis Times ROY W. HOWARD, President. „ FELIX F. BRUNER. Editor. * A.-MAJYBORN. Bu. Mgr. Member of the Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance * * * Client of the United Press and the NEA Service * * * Member of the Audit Bureau of Circulations. Published dailv except Sunday by Indianapolis Times Publishing Cos., 214-220 W. Maryland \ St., Indianapolis .. . SubscripUon Rates: Indianapolis-Ten Cents a Week. Elsewhere-Twelve Cents! a Week * * * PHONE—MA in 3500.
No law shall he passed restraining the fre e interchange of thought and opinion, or restricting the right to speak, write, or print freely, on any subject whatever.—Constitution or' Indiana.
Bus Progress Stopped SHE public service commission, through its ruling on the motor bus situation, has stopped for the time being progress in transportation in Indianapolis. The decision as a whole simmers down to the proposition that existing transportation lines, bus and street car, shall continue to operate but that there shall be no additional bus lines. The ruling has ben described as containing elements of both victory and defeat for both the Indianapolis Street Railway Company and the Peoples Motor Coach Company. Asa matter of fact, the ruling was almost a complete victory for the street car company. Both the car company and the" mptor coach company asked permission to operate additional bus lines, but it was obvious from the beginning that tlje object of the car company was merely to offer motor bus competition to the bus company. The car company probably is glad enough to'be denied the right to operate additional motor busses so long as the bus company is denied the same privilege. The' commission has taken the attitude that a citizen in a given community is entitled to transportation but not to a choice of transportation. If there happens to be no bus line in his neighborhood h(? must either ride a street car or buy a flivver, regardless of the wish of the bus company to serve him with what might be ills favorite form of transportation. The reason for all this, the commission says, is that it is attempting to avoid ‘‘ruinous competition.” Such “ruinous competition,” when it existed among some Indianapolis utilities, used to serve to keep rates down and service up, but the commission does not recall this fact. Asa matter of fact, the commission says something entirely different. Competing bus service, the commission says, borrowing an expression from the terrible Darwin, would result in a question of “survival of the fittest.” Evidently the commission does not believe in evolution. We always held the heretic opinion that progress is accomplished largely through survival of the fittest. But we had better say no more along this line or some Blackford County trustee will try to have us put in jail. “We have passed the period when the public is required to stand back and pay expensive overhead and all the bills of duplication of service, while one utility is at the other's throat trying to run it out of business, so that it may have a monopoly in that particular field,” says the commission. By all means, gentlemen, let’s don’t let anybody strive to obtain a monopoly. Let’s protect the monopolies already in existence. Do you remember the days when one telephone company was engaged in “ruinous competition” with the other and we had $1.50 service?
The 8-Hour Day Pays Ts ERVOUS investors in the stocks and * bonds of the Standard Oil Company of New Jersey have been assured by President W. C. Teagle that the eight-hour day has been
Foreign Loans Increase
Timm Washington Bureau. Sew York Accnue. f— 3 ASHINGTON, July 20. IVY/ America's direct financial 1 * V 1 stake in the peace and prosperity of foreign nations has now reached the record figure of $?0,000,000,000, according to compilations of the Department of Commerce. This sum, which approximates S2OO for every man, woman and child in the United States, is divided almost equally between loans made by private individuals and by the United States .Government. While the Government is engaged in attempts to collect the debts owed it by foreign governments, private investors are continuing to lend great sums to Europe, to Canada and South America, and to the Orient and Australia. In the first six months of 1925 the total of these private loans exceeded $550,000,000, or 50 per cent more than during the first half of 1924. Three-fourths of these new loans went to foreign governments and one-fourth to private industries located abroad. A year ago nearly all loans made by Americans to foreign countries went direct to the governments. The Commerce Department’s review of world finance indicates two important trends: 1. That confidence of American investors in world stability and the resultant stability of foreign industries is on the upgrade. 2. That the United States Is without a rival in financing the needs of both governments and industries, no matter in what part of the world they are located. Just after the close of the World War nearly all loans made by American investors abroad were guaranteed by foreign governments, or made to the governments themselves. Americans would not take a chance on private industry. If the pres- , ent trend is maintained, it is alto- • it .
adopted “without any material increase* in unit cost of the different'operations.” This reply was made in response to inquiries as to how much philantropy'was involved in the company's shift .from the twelvehour day to the eight-hour day. Though the company made an incre.‘aso, -in the hourly wage scale, and agreed to pay a man who had been earfiing sl2 for a twelvehour day, $lO for an eight-hour day, there will be no increase in costs. It is not surprising ithat this result should be obtained. In every industry whjere long hours have been abandoned and the eight-hour schedule adopted, it has been found that men are more productive in proportion totthe time applied to their work. The eight-hour day is both .humane and practical. That it is humane should be enough to cause its general adoption. That it is also practical—that it will even pay dividends —leaves even its “hard-headed” opponents without a sound of objection.
Well, N0w.... Gosh! 77 IST! And also shush! Even Wall. Street 1~1 has ears! The International Bankers—capital I and capital B because this is capital—have joined the Bolshevists! Yes, that’s vdiat wefre told. ItHcomes from London. It’s like this: About#a year agoian extremely Socialistic person, named Matteotti, an Italian deputy, was brutally, murdered. Other Italian Socialists ever since*, have insisted Mussolini ’s Fascisti plotted and- carried out the assassinate a, even to the point of Premier Mussolini having had forehandsknowledge of the whole thing himself. This they cite as a samplle of the trt actionary and czar-like policy of an autocratic government. And Italian Socialists—ana-Commu-nists—have been pretty sore. Thus Moscow has considered Italy a good field to cultivate. Also Wall Street and the International Bankers. Apparently resenting.the treatment that their friends, the Socialists and Communists of Italy, have been receiving at the hands of Mussolini, our Idle Rich, so we Te told, have decided to makeicommomcause with Moscow! “Occult international forces 'from Wall Street to Vienna and from Milan to Moscow,” says the London Telegraph, are working to oust Mussolini from power and abusing the same method. ‘That is to say, emi&aiies of the (forces in question have been enrolled in the ranks of the Fascisti for the purpose of sowing dissention and demoralization.” It’s positively blood-curdling. Wall Street and Moscow, banker and Communist, boodl<*r and Bolshevist, hand in hand, gumshoe to gumshoe slinking around together to avenge a murdered Socialist and wreck an ultra-conserva-tive capitalistic government. Morgan and Trotsky, Rothschild and Zi- oviev in cahoots, buying their false whiskers and bombs at the same counter, joining the Fascisti and boring from within! Sea serpents and Balkan war clouds {must be scarce this summer.
gether likely that private loans will soon overtake loans to governments. During the first half of 1925, while American loans were making big increases over the same period in J 924, foreign loans made by Great Britain fell almost to uero. lExcept for loans made to some of the British Dominions, no external government loans of any kind were floated in England during the first half of 1925. Loans to. private industries abroad totaled approximately $25,000,000. The extent to which the United States has replaced England as world banker is further revealed by Australia's present negotiations for a large loan in New York. Never before has Australia attempted to place its bonds elsewhere than in London, but now, owing to the inability of England to advance the money, Australian bonds aggregating $100,090,000 will be sold to private investors in the United States.
Household Pests Summer time brings the insect pests that are the bane of all housewives—the house-fly, the mosquito, the house centipede, the bedbug, ants roaches and fleas. The latest bulletin, just ready by our Washington Bureau, on Household Pests tells you exactly how to make effective war on these destroyers of comfort and health. Fill out the coupon below and send for it. Clip Coupon Here Household Pests Editor, Washington Bureau The Indianapolis Times, 1322 New York Ave., Washington, D. C. I want a copy of the bulletin, HOUSEHOLD PESTS, and enclose herewith 5 cents in loose United States postage stamps or coin for same: Name , St. and No. or R. R.,... City State... I am a reader of The Indianapolis Times.
The Big Boss By Hal Cochran j jOMETIMES the boss has a I j reason to think that the * -J world is a queer working place. Sometimes we feel he’s a hard-hearted gink and of feeling has narry a trace. He is the man who is heading the works, where the everyday fellow’s employed. His is a brain that, you’ll find, seldom shirks, for it’s bound to be ever annoyed. Mere petty things that are bothersome, quite, are brought to his desk every day. Using discretion, he sets problems right, e’er he ' sends puzzled men on their way. Co-operation means business success. Tt’s the key to our work-q----day cheer. Co-operation would fizzle, I guess, if the big boss we work for weren’t here. Give him the credit that’s due. That’s the touch that will help when it’s all done and said. While we are using our hand-power and such, he’s the fellow who’s using his head.
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SCIENTISTS SIGHT COMETS AT GREAT DISTANCE AWAY
By David Dietz V f.A Service Writer jr-j-i 1 HREE heavenly visitors are f I I “looking us over” at the •—,| present time, getting theif first glimpse of our earth, Mars, \%ynus and the other planets. The visitors are comets. Astronomers, those pioneers on the celestial side ot the last frontier, have caught sight of the visitors with their telescopes. One was discovered by Schain of the Pulkovo Observatory, Russia. The second was sighted by Reed of South Africa, and the third by Or 1 - kisz of Crackow, Poland. Astromomers ail over the world are now watching the progress of all three comets.
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A comet and its tail. Short streaks are stars nliotograplied as they—or the eaith—moved through the sky*.
The World Over
By Chester H. Rowell
mHE spectacle is predicted in the next Congress of the Dement ats out-Melloning Mellon. Instead of cutting the maximum suteax to 25 per oent, as Mellow proposes, soipe of the Democratic leaders are talking of half that. The argument, according to cynical Washington correspondents, who never see any but vot&-getting motives, is that last year the Democrats tried the experiment of joining with the insurgents, on the upposition that it was popular t > lower the taxes on small incomes and keep them up on large ones. But, from the election, they concluded that there was something unpopular about their party, and inferred that it must be this. So now they may try the reverse policj to see if that is any more popular. How would it be for somebody to consider, not popularity, but right? Fortunately, in financial matters the right policy eventually becomes the popular one. It vindicates itself by its practical operation. Taxes may be too low, as well as too high. Results tell. mHE worst way to adjust taxes is to try either to “cinch the rich" or to bluff the poor. If yqu really succeed in cinching the rich, you usually injure the poor, by lowering wages, raising prices and increasing unemployment. More often you do not silcceed, hut merely bluff the poor into thinking that you have done- so. The very tax that seems to favor the poor is likely to be the one which they pay themselves, most burdensomely.
Tom Sims Says Bet a grape has a better time fermenting than it does becoming • grape juice.
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Every now and then a bathing girl goes in wading. Things are not perfect. If cantaloupes were as big as watermelons they would cost too much. A small town is a place full of innocent bystanders. Summer* bringfe its t r o u b 1 e s.
Sims
among which is trying to keep the pick in the ice box. Women may talk more than men, but they don’t say as much. That shows women have the most sense. Even if smoking is nice it keeps a .lot of men from getting nervous enough to go to work. Ba careful about reducing or you are liable to reduce your chances o£ living. Figures may lie, but not in bathing suits. Even if the world is small you can have a big time in it. The second crop of straw hats will be ripe in August, f Teachers who have had no luck at marrying are signing up for another year of teaching. Too much money doesn’t go to a man’s head. It goes to his landlord. > ’ A good shimmy dancer is lucky. She can shake the water oft instead of using a towel. Our estimate is that all phobbs snapped on vacations will be shown to almost everybody. The average .-ran thinks the world would be a fine place If everybody agreed with Jiim. Bathing girl doesn’t care a wrap.
None of the three will approach close enough to the earth to be visible without the aid of a telescope. Schain’s comet is the most interesting. It is 400,000,000 miles away, yet visible in the telescope. Comets are not usually visible at that distance. This means that Schain’s comet is a giant among comets. Were it to approach closer to the earth, its tail would he visible as a great streak of fire across the sky. When a comet is at a great distance from the sun, It has no tail. The closer it gets to the sun, the larger the tail grows. Asa result, astronomers believe that the tail is composed of some extremely thin gaseous matter which is pushed out of the head or nucleus of the comet by the effect of the sun’s rays upon it. NEW reason for keeping a fashionably thin figure is UL—J advanced by Dr. Hugo Eckner, famous Zeppelin expert who piloted the Los Angeles from Friedrichshafen to Lakehurst on her initial trans-Atlantic journey. Dr. Eckner says he believes that trans-oceanic Zeppelin service will soon be a regular thing, and that passengers will be charged according to their weight. A rate of $6 a pound would he fair, he says. • • • B r ~~~ EWARE “the blues.” We don’t mean the musical type which usually has the effect of producing anything but the blues. We mean prolonged periods of mental depression. They are a danger signal, according to a bulletin just issued by the national committtee for mental hygiene. A study of 167 cases of suicide in Massachusetts revealed that prolonger attacks of mental depression or “the blues” was an outstanding symptom in one-third of the cases.
GREAT ADVANCE OF MEDICAL SCIENCE S t ~~~ TEP by step, science is approaching the point when ■ there will be nothing left to die of except violence or old age. From two sources, one in Canada and one in France, neither of them quack, come reports of apparently promising progress toward a specific cure for tuberculosis. This news, It is fair to add, is of no present practical interest to anyone now afflicted. Neither treatment, if successful, will be available in time to be of use to anyone who is beyond recovery by present hygienic methods, or to make it safe for any one who needs the treatment to delay taking it in the hope of something more specific. But if some specific, for cure or immunity, is developed, one of the major plagues of mankind will be gone. There is far to go; but consider the progress that has been made, since medicine became partly scientific, within the last fifty years. The acute infectious diseases are some of them mastered, and the rest on the way to mastery. Tuberculosis is already largely curable, without a specific remedy, and that is almost in sight. Cancer is still a puzzlie, but already there is knowledge enough to save multitudes of sufferers, if they will take advantage early enough (with the emphasis on the “early”) of that knowledge. Diabetes is not cured, but controlled, so that it can be lived with. "Bright’s disease” is harder, but something can be done even with that. "Heart disease” covers a large range of conditions, many of which can be prevented. There is much still to do, but if this generation does as well as the last, the normal working life of our grandchildren should be 80 years.
Ask The Times You can gel an answer to any question of fact or inlormation by writing to The Indianapolis Times Washington Bureau. 1323 New York Ave.. Washlnton. D. C., inclosing 3 cents In stamps for reply. Medical, legal and marital advice cannot be given, nor can extended research be undertaken. All other questions will receive a pergonal reply. Unsigned requests cannot be answered All letters are confidential.—Editor. , I have heard that the late Chief Justice White’s will is a model of brevity and clarity? Can you quote it? It is as follows: “This Is my last will. I give, bequeath and devise to my wife, Leita M. White, In complete and perfect ownership, all my rights and property of every kind and nature, whether real, personal or mixed, wherever situated, appointing her executrix of my estate without bond, and giving her seisin therein. Edward D. White.” Can you name some of the greatest engineering feats of modern times? > The building of the Panama Canal, Suez Canal, the cantilever bridge at Quebec, the Hudson tubes. What do the Initials I. N. R. I. on a crucifix stand for? They are the Initials of the Latin words lesus Nazarenus Rex ludaeorum, meaning "Jesus of Nazareth, king of the Jews." What are some important legume crops? Among them are alfalfa, vetch, clover, lentils and the various kinds of beans and peas. Can you give me an example of a connecting verb as used in a sentence? "He went away, running to’meet his father.” Which languages have the longest and shortest alphabets? The old Russian, with thirty-five letter signs is the longest, and the Greek, with twenty-four letter signs, Is the shortest.
Hy This is a fine welcome 11WT yoo’o think my aiame \ Ig HOME.-A STACK OP UNPAID BILLS ? IJj PICKET FENCE THE WAV THEY TACK yyiTH SIX WEEKS DUST ON THEM.'/ I3a BILLS ON iT.V IP THE politicians our credit Will be about as good : were as prompt keeping their AS THE HEARING OF AN EAR OP PROMISES TO SOAK THE HIGH COST ( CORN WHEN you q ET THROMH'-I fCj
BIKAT THAT BILL. FOR TRYING TO SWAT THE COST 1 - YOU’D THINK I HAD OF LIVING WITH THE AVERAGE tPAKTMENT IN THE US- PAYCHECK IS LIKE TRYING TO CRACK 1 SURV. THESE LANDLORDS /A ROCKS WITH A FEATHER DUSTER// THINK THE COST OF U V/INq mj-j-fi, , iriV *N UMBRELLA- IT'S GOT BE UPTO P0ANyti00D- ........... ... j
A Little Child Helps Sills To Be A Star; Do Not Miss Seeing ‘The White Desert’
By Walter D. Hickman Rr — IL.EY painted youth at the old swimmin’ hole, but it i_J remained for the movies to reflect youth as an influence for good upon their elders. Just as Charlie Chaplin made Jackie Coogan so Milton Sills helps to make little Helen Rowland the best child actress in the business today. This happens in “The Making of O'Malley,” in which Milton Sills is
starred for the first time in his own right. And this little tot is not a sugar teaser, meaning that she not only appears as a natural child, blit she is called upon to do some heavy work. This she does with marvelous natural appreciation of the art of acting. In doing this in the big scenes with Sills, she aids the new star to safely establish himself in his own name. Ever since “The
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Milton Sills
Sea Hawk” It was a sure thing that Sills soon would be a star. In the "O’Malley” movie, Sills is cast as a New York policeman who is as hard as nails. His superior officers recognized his worth, and to make him “human” they make a traffic cop out of O’Malley. There we see what little feet does to hard and big hands. In the softening of O’Malley you see and feel the Influence of a little crippled girl, played by the Rowland child. In the background you discover the faces of crooks, bootleggers and others that the police must deal with while on duty. But standing out in the story Is the love theme which concerns Sills and Dorothy Msckslll. The traffic sndts in New York are the real article. I think that when .you leave the Circle this week that most of yoi>- love and understanding will be centered around Helen Rowland. It is true that Sills is called upon to do any great amount of heavy work but the entire picture is fairly satisfying entertainment, tho sort that appeals to the entire family, hut it is not the kind that Sills should star in. I found some bad judgment in showmanship used by Seymour Simons’ orchestra or rather by the man v.ho did the announcing and attempted to sing. I sat near the stage and it was difficult for me to understand what this man was trying to sing. His vocal efforts should le eliminated for the best results. There is no doubt that this man can write the songs of the day but he can’t sing 'em. Just why he announces the number when the electric board at the Circle does splendid silent anriouncing, Is beyond me. Among the numbers played by the orchestra are “Sunrise,” “Simon Medley,” “Got Nq Time,” “Little Red Headed Boy,” “Just A Drink” and “Nola” in which a banjo player shows that he is the real article. At the Circle all week.
Movie Verdict i Circle —A child walks away with the human interest and much of the honor In “The Making of O’Malley,” in which Milton Sills is supposed to be starred. Apollo—Bebe Daniels has a chance to play with the perils of the manicure business In “The Manicure Girl ” Story moves slowly, but Bebe is all right. Colonial —“Cheap Kisses” has the services of at least four Interesting actors. Good enter talnment. Ohio—There Is every ro ton in the world for you seeing "The White Desert.” Honest realism. Splendid.
THE SPUDZ FAMILY—By TALBURT
RIGGED NATI'RJS PLAYS IMPORTANT PART AT OHIO.
When a movie director turns loose a mountain of snow for realistic effect, the Job is u dangerous one as well as startling. The snow slide scene is the big moment in “The White Deport,”
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Claire Windsor.
engaged in building a railroad tunnel through the mountains. This slide, caused by the engineer In charge using too much dynamite so he could complete the tunnel In time, causes real human drama to be enacted. The man and a few women In the colony are shut off from th world In dead of winter. There Is no meano of communication left after the slide. Even the "grub” house containing all tho fqpd was swept away. The real appeal of this movie Is how the director hail worked out the effect upon the characters of the men and the women in tho camp. Menr often go insane und become brutes under such conditions. Others will become heroes and glvo their Ivies In Hn effort to get aid. That is the dramatic background of “The White Desert" which has hern filmed In the western mountains in the winter. The three leads have been splendidly cast but you will remember the picture because nature has been harnessed Into the role of a great uctor. I sincerely urge you not to miss "The White Dr.-erf at the Ohio this week. The comedy Is llnrry Lnngdon In "The White Wing's Bride.” Bill Includes music by the Charlie Dnvla orchestra find a solo by Cy Milders. At the Ohio all week. -I- •!• -I----lIOW WELL 1)0 YOU KNOW MOVIE ACTORS? Have often been impressed by the way patrons of tlie movies are acquainted with the “faces" of the film actors. It is wonderfully nice to le able to recognize the "face” of everyone in a cast. This week at the Colonial. I ant sure that you will enjoy "Cheap
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Kathleen Meyers
times ho is prancing around and pulling his hair. And yet this sort of thing fits the character that he plays In "Cheap Kisses.” 1 studied Cullen Landis very closely in this picture. He has the looks, a pleasins way and other needed attributes, but somehow or other I don’t carry away u mental picture of this man. Can't explain It. Lillian Rich registers well In role that demands refined work although she starts out as a chorus girl. "Cheap Kisses" may be best explained as an intimate jazz comedy
iviUx\ jl> Al , J l L i 20,1925
drama. The Jnzz scenes are not overdone. You know every person does not go crazy when they attend a party. That Is the trouble with most of the jnzz pictures—thedlrect or goes wild over such parties. There Is some wonderfully effective night photography in “Cheap Kisses.” The lesson might he stated In these words: kisses come from cheap people.” The bill Includes a comedy, “The Milky Way," with Puffy, a news reel, showing scenes from the Scopes trial and music by the American Harmonists, At the Colonial all week. •!l •!• •!• BEBE FINDS THAT HANDS ARK DIFFERENT When a girl becomes a mancurlst in a hotel beauty parlor, she ie bound to learn the hande ot men mean different things. The holding of a “paw" has a meaning all of its own. The brightest nails may not mean that the owner has the brightest head. That Is what Bebe Daniels discovers as the sweet little manicurist in "The Manicure Girl." 0 Some guys have their nails polished just to get 'em held by a
which has the services o f Claire Windsor, Pat O'Malley and Robert Frazer. Oh, you will say that this snow slide business has been worked to death in the movies. Admit that, but this slide is a vital part of the story. Everything centers about it. The death dealing results of this slide on a little mountain colony
t -i-
Bebe Daniels
at the opera, furs, coats, Jewels and the like. She nearly makes a terrlbln mistake when she nearly becomes the petting companion of a rich guy who was married. But our little municurist hnd a heart of pure gold. She sends back the rich man to his wife and then begins to realize that her feller was some bozo after all. <- Rather think that Bel>o Damtlr is tho Jnu Claire of the screen. She knows how to be coy and cute without being a baby. In this picture she is just Bebe Daniels dreesed up like a manicurist. Pretty and cute and all of that. She it supported by Charlotte Walker. Hale Hamilton, Edmund Burns (watch this boy) and others. The story is really too light but it given Bebe a chance to be Bebe. A little above the average in light summer entertainment. The ending of the story is rather so so. Bill Includes a Mack Scnnett*com edy, a news real and musto by'Emil Seidel and his orchestra. At the Apollo all week. •I- •!* i The leis for the first hnlf of the week ts offering Hoot Gibson In "Taming the West.” “Temptation” with Carmel Myers is the all week attraction at the Crystal. Other theaters offer today: "Dear Me," at English’s; Harry Downing at the Palace, and "They Gypsy Idyll," at the Lyric, Can you give the dimensions of some of the largest private yachts In the United States and the names of the owners? • Among the lnrgest are the Hlrondelle, length 291.8 feet, breadth. 86.1 feet, gross tonnage, 1,821, owned Ivy the International Klim Company! Atlanta, length 269.0 feet, breadth, 33.4 feet, gross tonnage, 1,808, owned by the late George J. Gould; Delphlno, length, 214.7 feet, breadth. 35.5 feet, gross tonnngo, 1,556, owned by Mrs. Horace Dodge. Are there any snakes In England. and Scotland? There are no snakes In Ireland or Scotland and enter two •pectes hava>.ver bcenjtotuSk
Kisses" much more If you watch the Individual work of Cullen Jgtndis, Lillian Rich. Louise Dresser, Sydney De Grey, Cera Reynolds, I Incoln Stedmnn and especially that of Jean Hersholt. 1 will always remember I’aullne Lord because she knows how to make her hands "talk." The same can be said of Hersholt. llis great value is that he i never overdoes a scene although at
pretty girl. It seems, „ aocordlng to the stoat, that the bigger the tip that a guy gives a girl the bigger heart he has or ninybo he drives a foreln car instead of a flivver. Who can tell, our little manicurist started nut ns a sweet cute little thing. Hho hnd the nicest sort of honest guy for u feller. Ho was honest and straight, but the girl begun thinking In terms of a box
