Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 July 1939 — Page 7
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“Conservation
FN OIL TAINT
WITH POLITICS OF LOUISIANA
Federal Agents Draw Net - Closer Around Huey’s Picked Successors.
. .. By THOMAS L. STOKES ra Times Special Writer "NEW ORLEANS, July 24.—-Lou-isiana is one of the world’s oil
* bonanzas, and oil taints its poli-
tics.
Federal agents from the Interior | .and Justice Departments an: the Internal Revenue Bureau are busy
looking into various aspects of oil
-and its relation to Federal laws and
state political figurns. This is
part of the far-flung investigation |
which day by day is drawing the net closer about the Tegime of Huey Long's hand-picked successors. Another phase of the investigation has just resulted in Federal indictments against Seymour Weiss of New Orleans, former treasurer of Huey’s political organization; Dr. James Monroe Smith, former president of Louisiana State University, and three ¢thers. They are charged with using| the mails in a scheme to defraud the taxpayers and the university by selling to the state property which it already owned.
| Favoritism Charged
" Evidence so far gathered in the oil inquiry reveals favoritism to certain companies and operators by state officials in charge of enforcing the Louisiana proration laws. Internal revenue agents are working from the income-tax angle, which in the past has proved effective in revealing what may lie behind ‘special political favors. Among the principal figures who have had to.do with oil, either in administering the laws or as company officials or producers, are: Robert 8. Maestri, Mayor of New Orleans, who was appointed State Commissioner by Huey Long and served until 1936. He was one of Huey’s chief lieutenants and, since the. “Kingfish” died, has been the outstanding power in the triumvirate which nas ruled the state, the other members being Seymour Weiss and former Governor Richard W. Leche, who resigned three weeks ago. William G. Rankin, who succeeded Mayor Maestri as Conservation Commissioner, and who is said still to look to his predecessor for his orders.
Went Above Quotas, Claim
- Dr. James G. Shaw, a dentist, who was chief of the Conservation Com-
mision’s Minerals Divisions until he}
was fired a few days ago by the new Governor, Earl K. Long, Huey’s brother. Dr. Shaw, appointed by Huey, issued numerous “special orders’ permitting oil companies to
produce beyond quotas fixed by state
proration laws, these orders frequently being merely. blanket validation of excess oil already produced. William G. Helis of New Orléans, an oil operator said to be the richest Greek in the United States. Mr. Helis has been favored ih production allotments. Last May he sailed for Greece with a party which proposeti to explore for oil in his native land, and has not returned. Harry Fotiades, associated with Mr. Helis in oil operations. Posy Albert C. Glassel of Shreveport, an official of the Pelican Oil & Gasoline Co., who was one of the defendants in a case, which the Federal Government won, involving excess production under the Connally “hot oil” act in the famous Rodessa
* 0il field of the Shreveport area.
Control of Streams Factor Freeman W. Burford, president of the East Texas Refining Co., also a defendant in the same case. The alleged excess production in this case
.occurred while Mr. Maestri was €on-
servation Commissioner, the “special orders” validating it under state law being issued by Dr. Shaw. A law put through by Huey Long gave the State control of all stream beds. Southern Louisiana, along the Gulf Coast, is criss-crossed with streams in the oil area now being developed by several major companies. This gives state politicians control over oil lands strategically situated. Enforcement of the proration law along the Gulf Coast also is complicated because of the numerous outlets in canals and bayous to the gulf. It would be easy here to overlook evasions of the law. The Conservation Commissioner, under Louisiana law, is. a virtual dictator over oil production, he has wide discretion. He is not bound by facts developed at hearings, and can find contrary to showings if he chooses.
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The first of six “Symphonies at Sundown” was held yesterday evening at the Rauh Memorial Lirary garden and was sponsored by the Matinee Musicale and the Library. The program was presented
by the Indianapolis Federal Concert Orchestra and the Federal Ensemble, directed by Paul Fidlar. Dr. Gino A. Ratti of Butler is chairman of the series and Miss Beatrice Geddes, librarian, was hostess.
TRIAL SET FOR 5 IN LOUISIANA
Gov. Long Says He'll Carry Out Brother Huey’s Wealth Program.
NEW ORLEANS, July 24 (U. P)). —Trial of five prominent Louisianans on charges of using the mails to defraud the State of $75,000, will begin the last of August or the first of September, Federal Judge Wayne G. Borah said today. The five are Dr. James Monroe Smith, former president of Louisiana State University; J. Emory Adams, his wife's nephew; Seymour Weiss, millionaire hotel man and former treasurer for the organization of the late Huey P. Long; Louis E. Lesage, assistant to an oil company president, and Monte E. Hart, contractor for many state buildings. Dr. Smith will remain in custody of Federal authorities until after his arraignment next week. ‘The five were accused of conspiring to defraud the State in a hotel swindle, and in addition, Smith and Hart were accused of using the mails in a fraudulent $14, 000 tax
;collection scheme,
Governor Long made a speech in
of much of the material and many of the mannerisms with which Huey electrified Louisiana audiences. He pledged himself -to carry out his brether’s program, particularly “thare the wealth.” running down his face and’ his hair hanging over his. brow, Governor Long reached: his chmax by shouting: “The papers and othér people are trying to scandalize poor Huey. If Huey made some mistakes, they were .those of the mind and not of the heart. They can’t cry down the name of Huey ‘Long in this state.”
BROAD RIPPLE POST 10 HOLD FESTIVAL
Paul E. Miller, commander of Broad Ripple Post 312, American Legion, and other new officers today took charge of plans for a festival Thursday. Friday and Saturday nights at the post's new home, 64th St. and College Ave. The program each night will include a fish fry, dancing, jitterbug contests and singing. Other officers elected recently.include George W. Pennington, first vice: commander; Harold Traylor,
‘second vice commander; Myron C.
Bard, adjutant; D. C. Bray, finance officer; Lawrence Hinshaw, service officer; Cecil Hirtman, chaplain; Richard Fields, ‘historian; Ray Pitcher, sergeant-at-arms, and L. P McGhehey, athletic director. The executive committee includes Girstle Hague, Mr. McGhehey, Herbert Kerbox and Walter Fuller. Delegates to the state convention at Bloomington Aug. 18-22 are Hyman Champer, John McShane and Past Commander Claude E. Gass. Alternates are to be Mr. McGhehey, Mr. Miller and Paul Talbott. Dele-
{gates to the district for a year are
to be Mr. Miller, Mr. Bard and Mr. Gass. Alternates are to be Mr. Rolland Armentrout and John Noon.
FARM YOUTH KILLED
Melvin Sons, 20, of Medora, Ind. died at the Long Hospital yester-
day when a load of hay fell on him while he was working. He is the
son of Frank and Mabel Sons.
ments of 1% per month, which terest.
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Alexandria last night that made use|
She was: 74. With . sweat She was a native a;
day of a broken neck received Fri-|.
LOCAL DEATHS |;
Mrs. Lottie May Fox
Mrs. Lottie May Fox, 1306 Deloss St., died yesterday at Flower Mission Hospital. She was 21. Mrs. Fox was born at Glasgow, Ky. She is survived by her hus-
band, Arnold; a son, Robert David; her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Parsley; three brothers, Clarence, Chester and Homer Parsley, and ‘two sisters, Elizabeth and Loreuer Parsley. Services will be held at 3 p. Wednesday at the residence. Burial will be at Memorial Park.
Mrs. Doris Troxell
Mrs. Doris Troxell, 731 8. Delas wanda Ave., died today at Coleman Hospital after a long illness. She was 21. A lifelong resident of Indianapolis, Mrs. Troxell graduated from Ben Davis High School and was a member of the Lynhurst Baptist Church. She is survived by her husband, Cameron; her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Whyland; a brother, Walter Whyland, and six sisters, Lucille, Grace, Maxine, Jean, Shirley and June Whyland. Funeral services are to be held at 2 p. m. Wednesday at the home. Burial will be at Floral Park.
Mrs. Rosa C. Webster
Mrs. Rosa C. Webster,” widow of Charles T. Webster, died yesterday at the home of Her sister, Mrs. Elizabeth C. Ross, 723 E. 11th St.
‘Wikic ifichies iter pitt when a’ child - came’ here i io her parents. She was a ‘member of the East Tenth Street: Methodist Church and the Brookside Chapter of the Order of the Eastern Star. Survivors are the sister; a brother,
Henry H. Wesp, Home Place, and].
several nieces. Services will be held at 2 p. m. tomorrow at the home of her sister, Burial will be at Crown Hill, !
{John C. Johnson
John C. Johnson, who died Saturday at his home, 715 E. 23d St., will be buried at Washington Park following services at 2:30 p. m. today at the Montgomery Funeral Home. Mr. Johnson, who was 69, was a retired employee of the Nickel Plate Railroad. He was born in Clark County, Ky. He was a member: of the North Park Lodge, F. & A.M. and the Maccabees. Survivors are his wife, Minnie; a son, John M., Lexington, Ky.; a brother, Roland, Ford, Ky., and two sisters, Mrs. Mealy Thompson, Ford, ing Mrs. Lucy Gee, Mt. Sterling, Ye
Dorman R. May
Services for Dorman R. May, 1701 E. Troy Ave., who died at Lafayette Saturday of injuries received in a truck crash near Kentland Wednes-
.| day, will be held at 11 a. m. tomor-
row at the J. C. Wilson Funeral Home. Burial will be at Mooresville. Mr. May was 26. He is survived by his mother, Mrs. Lavra May Stucky, and two brothers, Leon and Charles May, both of Indianapolis.
Joseph B. Allgire
Friends may view the body of Joseph B. Allgire, who died yesterday at his Rome, 59 N. Audubon Road, between 11 a. m. today and 10 a. m. tomorrow at Shirley Brothers Central Chapel. Services will be held at 2 p. m. tomorrow at the Irvington Methodist Church, of which he was a member. Burial will be at Crown Hill. Mr, Allgire, who was 84, was 8g retired employee of the Pensylvania Railroad. He. was born at Canal Winchester, O., and came here 63 years ago. He became chief clerk of the Pennsylvania Railroad here. He retired in 1925 after 42 years of service. He is survived by his wife, Lorena; a daughter, Mrs. Forest Chenoweth of Indianapoli§; a sister, Mrs. Martha C. Keys, Eugene, Ore. and a granddaughter, Helen Louise Chenoweth, Indianapolis.
Joseph E. Easterday
Joseph E. Easterday, who died Saturday at the home of his brother, T. C. Easterday, 6316 Bellefontaine St., will be buried at the Ebenezer Lutheran Cemetery following funeral services at 2 p. m. today at the brother’s home. { Mr. Easterday, who was 83, w lifélong Indianapolis resident. was a founder of the Riverside Methodist Church and taught a Sunday School class there for 30 years. He had been a gardener and for several years attended the old settler’s reunions at Broad Ripple. Mr. Easterday is survived by four sons, Dr. H. R. Easterday, Indian-
| apolis; Early, Dayton; Floyd, West-
field, Kas., and Russell, San ‘Bernardino, Cal. three brqgthers, T. C., Luther and Robert, all of Indian-
apelis; two sisters, Mrs. Julia Maud :
m.|vived by three- daughters,
Mrs. Nora Smith
Mrs. Nora Smith, lifelong resident of Indianapolis, is to be buried at Floral Park Cemetery Monday following services at the residence, 1626 Wilcox St. : Mrs. Smith, wife of Hubert Smith, died Saturday after a brief illness. She was 47. She was a member of the West Side Nazarene Church. Beside her husband she is surMrs. Elizabeth Bryant, and Misses Grace
and Dorothy Smith. Also surviving
are three sisters; Mrs. Laura Smoot, Mrs. Mary Sales, and Mrs. Cora Shrader, and three brothers, Charles, Jack and Harry Shrader, all of Indianapolis.
Leon M. White
Funeral services for Leon M. White, who died Friday night at his home, 1213 Orange St., will be held at 2 p. m. today at the J. C. Wilson Funeral Home. Burial will be at New Crown Cemetery. He was 61. Mr. White was a lifelong Indianapolis resident. He is survived by three sons, Edgar, Virgil and Marvin, all of Indianapolis; a daughter, Mrs. Muriel Donavan, Indianapolis, and a brother, Ernest, also of Indianapolis.
Otto E. Kramp
Services for Otto E. Kramp, of 2919 E. New York St., who died Friday at Veterans’ Hospital, will be held.at 2 p, m. today at the, Jordan Funeral Home. Burial: be
at’ Washington Park. vHe was 49+
Mr. ‘Kramp was 5 World War veteran. He:was: a member of St. Mark’s - Lutheran Church, Logan Lodge, F. & A. M., and -the Electricians’ Union, Local 481. | He is survived by. his wife, Blanche; his mother, Mrs. Theodore Kramp Sr., Indianapolis; three sisters, Mrs. ‘Ida Emrich, Mrs. Anna Meyer and Mrs. Gertrude Kroenlein, all of Indianapolis, and two brothers, Theodore Kramp Jr., Indisnspe olis, and Edward, Detroit.
Mrs. Sarah L. Lockwood
Services for Mrs. Sarah Louise
Lockwood, who died yesterday at|
her home, 3445 W. Michigan St., will be held at 2:30 p. m. tomorrow at the Conkle Funeral Home. Burial will be at Crown Hill. Mrs. Lockwood, who was 74, was born at Providence, R. I., but had lived here 67 years. She was a a| member of the Fairfax CHristian Church.” Survivors are a son, L. A. Lockwood, Indianapolis, and three grandchildren, rah" Louise and Charles Lockwood, both of Indianapolis, and Edwin Lockwood, . of Marion.
Ralph Querfield fn
Ralph Overfield, an Indianapolis resident for 40 years, died yesterday at his home at 1721 Hoyt Ave. He was 69 and had been in ill health for a year. Mr. Overfield was a native of Jennings County. He had worked for the Big Four Railroad 25 years, working last at the Beech Grove Shops. He is survived by his wife, Bertha; a son, Kenneth, Indianapolis; = a daughter, Dorothy, Hie and three sisters, Mrs. Mary Boss, Indianapolis, Mrs. D. F. McDonald, Los Angeles, and Mrs. John Chambers, San Francisco. Funeral services will be held at 2 p. m. tomorrow at the J. C. Wilson Funeral Home. Burial will be at Washington Park.
TIPTON TAX RECEIPTS TOP THOSE OF 1938
Times Special : TIPTON, July 24.—Tax collections in Tipton County for the first half of 1939 exceeded by $8127 the amount collected for the first half of 1938, County Treasurer Cleon C. Hughes said today. Total collections for the first half of the present year were $195,393, of which $28,870 was the State's share. The amount going to the State will be divided in the following
manner, Mr. Hughes said: $4,408.40 for paying salaries and other ad-
ministrative costs of State Govern-| o | Ment; $8,028.88, school fuhd; e teachers retirement fund; $364.57,
$2500,
State agriculture board; $208.37, State forestry; $2083.43, educational support fund; $208.37, Indiana Wolf Lake Park; $2827.57, common school fund interest; $148.80, permanent endowment interest, and $92 for circuit court docket fees.
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/IRE leases New Studios
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Into Ninth Floor of Hotel by Oct. I.
Radio Station WIRE will move into new studios on the ninth floor
of the Claypool Hotel by the end of |
September. Signing of a 10-year lease was
confirmed today by Eugene C. Pul-|:
liam, WIRE president. Plans are under way now for a complete remodeling of the new quarters. The large assembly rooms, situated on both the eighth and ninth floors, will be modernized, redecorated and an organ ‘will be installed.” This will increase the station’s facilities
for originating broadcasts.
Weekly public broadcasts will be made, from the hall, which seats 1200 persons. Mr. Pulliam said there would be three new studios. All the public rooms at the hotel will be wired for broadcasting. WIRE was founded in 1923 as WKBF. The letters were changed in 1935. It is a member of the National Broadcasting Co. Red network and affiliated with the Mutual Broadcasting System. _
RIDES BEFORE WORK
Chester Morris and his son Brooks, aged 10, go for an early horseback ride over Bel-Air {rails each morning, before Morris reports for work with Wallace Beery on the set of “Thunder Afloat.”
RUSSIA WANTS HARPO
Harpo Marx, who made such a ‘| hit with his pantomime at Moscow a few summers ago, has received an invitation to make a repeat performance in the Russial capital.
[IN ‘GOOF GITTLE
Tawny Eaglesfield will take the role of Nancy Thatcher in “Goof Gittle,” one of five plays to be presented at 8 p. m. Thursday at ‘Caleb Mills Hall by the Shortridge Summer School dramatic depart-: ment. The plays will be directed by Miss Eleanor Dee Theek, Sum- . mer School dramatic teacher. -
Movie ‘Bad Men’ Not So Bad Now
Times Special HOLLYWOOD, July 24.—Hollywood bad men are finally beginning to get a “break” in this city as producers cast them ‘in more human roles. The bad men of another movie era were not only nasty,” they had to be bad looking. The present crop of film “heavies” is as good looking as the Gables, the Taylors or the Montgomerys. Akim Tamiroff, Humphrey Bogart and Brian Donlevy from now on will be allowed to show themselves without benefit of makeup as nice looking young men who are villains because they. have proper chance.
MUSIC
By JAMES THRASHER
Comes Now Shakespeare Swung by Benny Goodman, Due Next Season
OW that “Martha” has been swung in part and “The Mikado” in
its entirety—to say nothing
of the all-Negro “Macbeth” of a
few seasons back—word comes that “A Midsummer Night's Dream” is going to be served up a la Creole on Broadway next seasen. There will be words by Shakespeare and music by Mendelssohn, but with reservations. For according to that fountainhead of dramatic wisdom, the New York Times, Benny Goodman and an anonymous Columbia University professor are taking up where Avon’s bard
and the Leipzig composer left off.
- According to the announced plans, the setting will be New Orleans in the 1880s, and the cast will be half white and half colored. Maxine Sullivan is among: those mentioned, probably as a dusky Ti-
tania. One gathers that Mr. Goodman’s contribution will be in the nature of fourth dimensional swing. And if the play is to have -an operatic touch, as it apparently is, the King of Swing. will have to. do consiggiable. com‘posing of his own.
The history. ‘books’ reveal no -
‘music drama based on the Shakespeare play, and Mendelssohn’s as the only incidental music. It is conceivable that, until Mr. Goodman, no composer after Mendelssohn had felt that ‘he could improve greatly upon the Mendelssohn score. ‘Mendelssohn’s contribution includes 13 numbers. Only one of these is for voices, while there are two or three “melodramas” —musical pieces written to accompany dialog. So anything else, from arias to “ride” choruses, will be up to Benny. If the Shakespearean experiment is successful, we may see “Die Meistersinger” turning up as a jam session, or “Pagliacci” taking on some of the aspects of “Frankie and Johnnie.” Or maybe it has them already.
» » 2
close a choral concert with the: “Hallelujah” Chorus
from “The Messiah” is as sure,
though. less obvious, a recipe for success as bringing in the Marines or waving the flag at the end of a play. And when a conductor will replace the beloved Handel excerpt with a new song as his program's closing number, it speaks pretty well for the contemporary effort. All of which generalities are leaving Herbert Kaufman and William Pelz pardonably set up these days. Mr. Pelz finds time to do some composing amidst his duties as director of the State's WPA music project. And when George Calder commissioned him to write something for the Golden Jubilee Festival at Whiting next month, Mr. Pelz immediately sought out Herbert Kaufman of Indianapolis to provide a poem. The result is a “Song for the Workers and the Builders.” It has been adopted as the official song for this festival, which will have choruses from all over Northern Indiana participating. The new Pelz-Kaufman opus is for soprano and chorus, and Vivian della Chiesa will be the soloist at the Whiting debut performance. More ‘than 500 voices will make up the massed chorus. Mr. Pelz also is writing a book, though no one has figured “out where he finds the leisure time to’ do it. With six weeks’ work done, he hopes to snatch enough off
hours ” finish it in the next six months. The book’s self-explanatory title is “The Symphonic Tone Poem.” It will deal generally with the tone poem’s formal, esthetic and programmatic characteristics. zs #8 = ISS DOROTHY KNISELY, Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra press agent, has returned from a five-week stay with Maestro Fabien Sevitzky, the orchestra’s conductor, and Mrs. Sevitzky in California. In a land where press agentry is raised to the nth degree, Miss Knisely did a job of thoroughgoing publicity which might well reduce a Hollywood press department to helpless envy. With acute observation and infinite grace, she chronicled Mr. Sevitzky’s every rising up and sitting down for our public prints. Even their Brittanic Majesties received no more careful attention. # In consequence, Miss Knisely’s fund of symphonic news is wrung out, if not dehydrated. - And all that remains for today is the fact that the orchestra has welcomed its first “summer baby,” Harold Lee Barber by name, who was born recenfly in Chicago. Myron Barber of the horn section is the fond father. He'll be back in October to receive belated ‘ congratulations when the orchestra assembles for its new season.
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HOLLYWOOD
" Meet Maureen 0 Hara: Laughton Protege— Neo Maksis, No Carmine Claws, No SelfAwes:
By PAUL HARRISON
| everything is out here. This is the girl Mr. Laughton brought over for the role of Esmeralda in “The Hunchback of Notre Dame.” She played opposite him in “Jamaica Inn.” When Miss O'Hara had got into the slacks and out of the gypsy skirt (in which she had been rehearsing some dances) we went out into the sunlight and I found that her Bair varies from deep auburn to reddish gold and that. her complexion is peaches-and-cream garnished with freckles. . No makeup at all. No carmine claws, either. : faa no. : NLIEE Hollywood women in another way, she didn't have her biography — together with likes, aversions and a set of stock opinions—on the tip of her tongue. In a voice lightly tinted with brogue, she wanted to talk about everything except Maureen O'Hara. By the time we were halfway through lunch, I learned that she is 18 and has been acting ever since she could walk. She's the second of six children and the whole family appeared in am--ateur plays in Dublin. The family name, incidentally,” is FitzSimons. Mr. Laughton and his partner, Harry Palmer, persuaded her that O'Hara would be better. Going to school in Dublin, she spent her evenings in plays and radio skits until she was 13; and by that time she had developed her dancing so that she began appearing in ballet. Still no thought of pictures. But at 16 Miss O’Hara was sure she wanted to be an actress, and she joined the famed Abbey Players. There was a year of that, with zooming prominence, and then everything was changed by—of all people— the lisping warbler, Harry Richman.
82.8 8 : T seems that they were introduced at a party in Dublin one night, and when he returned to London he recommended her to some British movie producer. She doesn’t even know which producer, except that a screen test was offered her and it was seen by several different flickermakers who offered parts. She left the Abbey Theater, played a few minor roles around the London studios, then was seen by Mr. Laughton and chosen for “Jamaica Inn.” When Mr. Laughton was dickering with RKO for the “Hunchback” assignment, he showed “Jamaica Inn” to Pandro Berman, the production head, and recomended Miss O'Hara as Esmeralda. It was a part for which Ginger Rogers had tested. The Irish aefress-uancer iu the Job.
HE thinks Hollywood girls are | pretty—“except that: they wear too much paint and pow-
OLLYWOOD, July 24—~When your correspondent first saw Maureen O'Hara, she was putting on a pair of slacks. I had barged into RKO's little theater, and there was Mr. Charles Laughton’s . glamour protege, alone but for whatever leprechauns might have been | lurking around protectively. ‘She was getting into some new blue pants. But Hollywood is a remarkable place; nobody was embarrassed. Miss O’Hara also had on a voluminous gypsy costume which was serv- | ing as a portable dressing room. A veteran trouper, she has dressed all over in quarters scarcely larger, and she can’t get used to how spacious
der. They wear even more than women in London, and that's a great deal.” Talkietown itself is all’ right, she guesses. But Miss O'Hara doesn’t know much about it because she has been going to bed as early as possible every night to dream about ‘Ireland. She’s terribly homesick. “And I don’t believe ..it will wear off, either,” she said, “I want to get back just as soon as I finish this picture. 1 simply have to be in Dublin for Christmas. I know I can, though, because by winter I'll. be in London playing with Mr. Laughton in " ‘The Admirable Crichton’. 44 2 = » IN-TIN-TIN, a great-grand-son of the original, has been signed by Darryl Zanuck for “Hollywood: Cavalcade” to impersonate his famous ancestor. But" there'll be nothing in the story y about how the dog star rescued Mr. Zanuck himself from the |obscurity of a writing job. He wrote some of the Rin-Tin-Tin stories, then began to produce the pictures, and suddenly stepped in as head of all production at |the Warner studio. Sign on a theater marduee: “Only Angels Have Wings—and —Donald Duck.”
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