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Show e I t, IX Thi Deseret Tuesdays January '21, 194T News, Salt Lake Gtyy UtaK. - Page 5 New Juvenile Movie Star. Signs To Make New Films and will soon film another Cisco Kid there. The relationship between Hollywood, and Mexico under the new administration, p unusually friendly. By LOUELLA 0. PARSONS (Motion Picture Editor Interna-tiona-l. News Service 21. Jan. little girl to walk into our hearts since Shir-- ' ley Temple captivated the world in "Little Miss Marker" is Caro- lyn Lee, aged five. The irresistible child was taken back to Ohio after she played in "Honeymoon in Bair by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Warren Copp,- - who couldnt see a movie career for their little girl. HOLLYWOOD, (INS) The first . But-- ll - urging the Copps, who are in comfortable circumstances, to reconsider. Finally they relented and Carolyn appeared in "Virginia" for Edward H. Griffith. Now she has been signed on an exclusive contract and every effort will be used to try to get stories similar to the ones" SnirlejrrmadSTdurlngTier most successful days. The Lee baby goes to the president's ball Hollywoods youngest representative and then to New York for a personal appearance. Her next will be chosen by her Paramount sponsors with great eare. stopped me long-ti- er who created attention. such - rn- e Talked with Marlene Dietrich at the Jack Warners Sunday night and- she told me she had spent the- entire day at Jon von Sternbergs ranch being photographed, Marlene says Joe has the .most amazing collection of cameras and that she- considers him the worlds finest photographer He felt that Marlene had not been photographed properly in atill pictures so he took 50 or. more poses with, she said, a new camera that is set up like You dont doubt, an er hearing Marlene, that she Is not only grateful to Joe but that she Ijas every confidence in his ability. Joe and I, said Marlene, plan- to do a picture together. We will have Charlie Feldman sell us a package deal. Grace Hayes Is Married A Line Or Two: Charles Boyer, morrow! Lana And Tony - have been guessing that roHollywood columnist mance Is springing up between lovely Lana Turner, and Singer Tony Martin. This picture, taken in a Hollywood night spot, would seem to .indicate that the columnists may be" right. , ' - Camilla Denton, just gTsduated from accepts a temporary position as Mrs. traveling companion to wealthy North, who is going to California from Frank Kirkwood, a newspaper Chicago. reporter, tells her that Joe Raymond, a gangster, la being returned to California on the tame train and is in the com Cam pertinent next to Mrs. North's. sees Raymond several times before he alugs and chloroforms bis guard and it carried away by a speeding automobile. The girl suspects Mrs. North knows something about the escape because a small bottle from a dressing case is miss ing. takits Cam to In California Frank the cheap restaurant where Raymond's asks girl. Ruby Osborne sings. Ruby where Csu to visit her dressing room two masked men, one of whom she Bidel, recognises as Gang Leader Leftynervous search her purae. Ruby hat a breakdown and Cam insists on staying at the singer'a apartment overnight to attend hBr. At the Turf Club bell Cam sees Mark Cheney, Mrs. Norths nephew, whom She she is positive is Joe Raymond. follow Mark to his home, hears Lefty Side) threaten to blackmail him for arranging the escape of Joe Raymond, who is in reality Mark's twin brother. Sidel leave and Mark explains to Dale. Cam 'that Dale was reported to have died In a hotel fire, but instead he was alive and had a criminal Quirk, Mrs. North and Mark kidnaped Dale to m effort to restore him to normalcy. She or Dale, returns to the ball sees Jo abe has fallen in love and discover She decides to stav m with Mark. Cam calls on Job California and get Ruby and tells her shes seen college, is and Cam returns to her hotel her end room, sees tho coat Mark lent tends itvto his room with a note. because note the Mark never got to Lucia intercepted it. She announces m love fallen had she Mrs. North that or with Mark and intend to marry him expose the family. While Mrs North is 'reporting their conversation enters, saving she wants to talk He finallv consents fo with Mark. marrx Lucia, telltnf her ne loathes her Cam sees Lucias engagement announceana ment picture in the newspaper realises how much she whuld like to bes Frank down turns She wife. Mark's to the marriage proposal and return her? He hotel to find Mark waitmr for asks Cam to ro for a ride. He tells Cam that he loves her, but - - , to help, Cam tries to do somethingthrough Ruby, and there's more trouble but gangsters Ruby secs a way out, Interfere. to - free Cam has the fnformatton her. threatens but it Mark, net. Cam walk into the gangster he CHAPTER THIRTY-TW- r Doctor Hobart came In Norths of Mrs. out sitting room, hit usually bright, keen eyes, clouded ith worry. In his own quarters, he stood window, looking out into by lha grounds, thinkings. out of Things were getting hand. They were much more complicated than he ever had anticipated. Mrs. North, hts friend for years and whom he cared for with the sincere, deep regard of an wilder man for an older woman had just told what had occurred He decided" that the game wasn't worth the candle. ' Dale, too. would feel the same If he knew. He wouldnt want to wreck the lives of his brother - and his aunt as they 'were being wrecked for the sake of a chance to'become his normal' self. Marks twin brother, In the last day or so, had almost completely recovered his'normal poin- t- of .view, so far as it was possible to relieve without brain pressure. . Now he realized what he bad done, its full significance and - what it meant toIn mental anguish those who loved and suffering . Bel-Ai- -- . him. Gosh, - . -- t - , he had finally said, after Hobart had penetrated tha wall, he had built about himself. "I dont want to do, wrong. I don't want to hurt Mark or Aunt Elizabeths "Theyre the grandest people In the world. .Theyve always treated me great. But when I'm on mv own, I get, sudden spells and I cant seem to control, my real ze actions, ve n- -f hougtv-- I . that Im doing wrong. "Ita as though I really were two persons this fellow Jot Raymond, a not half bad guy who gets occasional criminal Im Doc, pulses and hasnt the strength-owill to resist them, and my- he said, half aloud. Least of all Mark. And Aunt Elizabeth has stood by me like a Trojan, too. Look at the chances she and Mark took to get me free so Doc could give me a going over? And the chances Doc himself Is taking. Of course thats on account of Aunty hes been in love with brother and that Elizabeth North her for years, I know that. He is my aunt. a impatiently brushed aside If they did well, you know small pile of shavings. kill like I only agreed to go through how guys that are. Id em if they tried 'to do anywith their plan because I knew would hurt either it would please them I didnt thing that Mark or Aunt Elizabeth." have- - much hope, then, of Doc beSomehow, the gangsters 'had ing able to do anything for me. found out about Dale. Lucia "had And now when he says hes sure Inforof I can be cured, this has to hapcleverly pieced scraps mation and suspicion together pen. Those mugs upset the apple and discovered their secret, cart. And that girl! like the crooks, she was His thoughts raced on for taking advantage of what she half an hour as he worknearly knew to get what she wanted ed at his carving, until at last a prominent name and security w'ith a sigh, he laid aside his for the rest of her life. knife. Like Mrs. North, Doctor HoCarefully he brushed up the bart was entirely up in the air shavings and small bits of wood on how to combat these attacks and put them in a waste basket. ontheir security,-He took off his dressing gown Well. he said, at last, ifit'g and his undergarments, and to be done, Ill have'to do it. went into the bathroom Soon he got He knocked the ashes from had the shower going. Then he and walking resolutely put on fresh clothes, found a across the floor, opened the door hat in the closet and fixed it at room.. correct angle on - his head. He leading into the adjoining Dale was where he expected had removed the label from the to find him, seated at a small hat as he had from his clothing. After- - a final "look about the Ubie.hisknife busy with a delicate wood carving. room he went quietly downstairs and slipped out of the house. Howre you, Doc, he grinOnly Doctor Hobart, watching ned, looking rip. from a darkened window upFine, fine young man, considstairs, saw him go. He nodded to ering the state my nerves art in. himself, and turned gravely back into the room. You? Youve got nerves? Dale snorted with disbelief. (To Be Continued) "I think jittery might be the (The Register and Tribune proper term inelegant, perhaps, . Syndicate) ' but very expressive. Whatve you got be jumpy about? Dales calm acceptance of Hobart's statement was 'proof that the thought the doctor was merely making conversation. He want right ahead with the panel -hewax 'carvtng"fiut 'or'afi oak' f body, self, Dale Cheney. "Sometimes I seem to.be both at once, tath my real self looking on while Joe does criminal things, pitying him, silently begging him not to do them. The only good thing Ive ever done Is to conceal my identity. None of the gang knows my real name knows that Mark is my too.-An- d, -- his-pip- -- . block. Dale, Im afraid the time has come, Hobart said, slowly, and so seriously that the man dropped his tool and sat eyeing Jilm,. curiously, the time has com to bow-legge- d Dachshund down the street with murderous intent and hamburger and weinerschnitzel are still on the menus. Until they are replaced by liberty cabbage" and ground sirloin and freedom veal cutlet we refuse to believe we are actually in the war. Iiv this connection, however, we must --confess that we are somewhat apprehensive as to the e fate of spaghetti and pasta and other Italiari delicacies because of course when we do actually get in the war we wljl probably be at war with Italy and Japan as well as Germany and no restaurant keeper could continue those titles on his bill of fare and remain loyal to the United States of America. So we are wondering by what names we will have to order our fa' vorite fodder. We are not worrying about Japanese tidbits, as we cannot recall ever mingling with fact, we do not know what the Japanese eat. We have a vague impression that it may be paper fans - and ivory ornaments though we suppose they must have other things more nourishing. But we-- care nothing about the Japanese diet whatever it may be. It is the Italian food, that concerns ms- - If patriotism requires that we eat it in some nomenclatural disguise, we will do it of course. But somehow we doubt that Lasagni would taste the same under a peudo-nym- n such as stuffed noodles. fag-iol- -- NEW YORK. (INS) Theres the nothing the matter with speak frankly to you. You rhean you mean there legitimate theater that a good, massacre wont. Isnt anv hop ' for me. Doc? Is double-edgethat it? cure, in the opinion of J. J. x On the contrary, I think Shubert. If Jake of Broadways famous with a not too serious operation to remove brain pressure you could blitzShubert frerers would be completely restored to krieg air theatrical unions --and normal in' a Tew months. Its ambush all dramatic critics, he not that, Dale." guarantees the legitimate s theater would bounce out of. It? inThen what? What else , Is there? valids Chair and do a saraband In the streets As quietly as he could, Hobart "Eliminate The unions, . and explained To his patient what had happened. About Lefty and youll have prosperity in' the tester, he said today, the 50th Dutch. Their impossible demands on threat of exposure to the 'poenniversary of his adventlmhe" show business on- - Broadway,-- lice. And how, Lucia had taken "Furthermore, I dont think advantage of. .the situation, too, any of these New York critics and was forcing Mfrk into a loveare competent to judge a play! less marriage. little man Dales face snapped the roly-polThats tough. was grim. Its a mess, isnt who has been engaged in run, . , ning fight and dramatic critics it, a terrible mess. for that both he and the Hobart nodded. . critics now regard it as a season"What do you think wed bet. al workout . ter do, Doc? Dale asked, after CRITICS WIELD KNIFE several minutes silence: Ther are seventeen theatrical I dont know,' Dale. It will unions to contend with nowtake some heavy thought and I want you to help me. Jjm going adays, he groaned in his big, back to my room for awhile, and handsomely furnished office in the heart,, Of the theatrical diswhen you've thought of sometrict "Af no time in the past did thing you may find mp' there. I ever hay less than five or six The doctor went back to hla own quarters snd carefully shut shows ill rehearsal. Now I want TO do aaTItlle UTpossTBIe. Dales door after himr also , Alone. Dale picked up his knife ,Th dramatic erttlcsThave again. He could think - better, Cn?lped produce this sad (fees ire more clearly .when Jut - .bends, In -- the man-wh- o, with his brothwere busy. er, Lee. hat been a power In the ' "Idont- - want to hurt any theatrical business for almost d y g Peter Lind aine Day has taken a lesson from shiny, glamorous things and decided that while they might be all right on a new car, theyre' no permanent help to an actress determined to make her way In tha world. Miss Day: who was born at Roosevelt, Utah, has the leading faminlne role in Walter Wangers timely thrill drama, Foreign Correspondent, coming to the Utah Theater Saturday, might very easily be a "glamour girl if she set her mind to it." Shes beautiful, shes charming, she has per- 21. (AP) Jan. BOSTON, Breaking a Boston tradition of two decades, the Metropolitan Opera Company will perform in a movie theater and at reduced rates instead of in the Opera House when It visits here in We do not find that any con. centration camps have been set up for thd imprisonment at government cost of German, Japanese and Italian aliens and that would certainly be the case if we were actually in the war, with the biggest camps for the Japanese in Hawaii and the Philippines. The railroads and the telegraph companies and the radio are still privately controlled and operated, whereas If we were in the war Uncle Samuel would be running them and not, we fear, with spectacular finan- sonality. March. Uncertainty as to whether the Opera House would be available led to the shift. Private owners of the house have offered it for sale, reportedly as a bus terminal or a market. In announcing the new arrangement, H.' Wendell Endicott, president of the Boston Opera Association, said the theater coincident-lnamed the Metropolitan had 4,300 seats, 1,200 more than the House, Opera making lower prices possible. f y cial success. We have observed no dames dashing about in martial trappings and helpful mood with reference to the entertainment and chocolate-barrinof the soldiery and no stands have yet been set - up an our- street- - cornsrs-for-tliberty loan salesmen, including - - - : Glamour is like a shiny new car it looks great for a year or so and them how it fades. Being an astute young lady, Lar- Opera To Play In Picture House poverty and sickness and death seem undisturbed, a situation tftat would not prevail if we were actually in the war. It would then be remembered that the Schmalzes and the Bertilottis stem back to the old rountries and they would naturally be objects of dark suspicion to the patriots. ock Ambition Is Really Tp Act ; Plays Lead In Foreign Correspondent Soon At Utah For the ceremony, the bride wore a teel blue flannel evening with ermine and sable gown wraps and a corsage of gardenias orchids. The party flew Is to Hollywood for a wedding breakfast. still be exchanging pleasant good mornings and good evenings with their neighbors of many years, the Schmalzes and the Bertilottis and the warm relations born of mutual helpfulness and sympathy m times of ' . Utah Actress Has No Yen For iGlamor 9 - If the hot heat of publicity were turned upon her, she might easily flower like - a orchid and become' the rage for a year or two and then fade, just as orchldsdo, I can gee no advantage in .trying to be something that youre not," she says, although she is smart enough to realize that she has Equipment for an oomph campaign If she were hot-hous- e -- so minded. Mis Haya ambition Is to be a great actress, and she's shaping her career In that direction. If her own studio puts her In trivial On Tabernacle Organ stories which any goode looking could romp Through.-shdoes 4 girl them as best she can. But on her Alxande Schreiner, will give - own Time, she-get- s tr few- friends the concert at the Tabernacle totogether, takes a script of some morrow noon: famous play and enacts it with youthful celebrities who ought Westminster Chimes Vieme all the seriousness and attention to be in uniform lugging guns, Adagio ToAppassjonate .Beethoven detail as though she were do-- but whose-fame-i- s considered a Second .Debussy ing it for full sized camera insufficient asset in selling bonds FavoriteArabesque Mormon Of stead of a 16 millimeter. hymn, to offset the tough service that by Organist lt,a;1?er-Arr- Js required of other young men. Melody. .Arr. No, we are not actually in the AAJ The Lost Chord...1. by Organist -- war. Sullivan If you want the $15,455 we can tell you that -up to date not a single song has dlences that grossed as much as been published caroling of us be$12,000 in a single night. Bernhardt would have playing on our way to somewhere, A $15,455 damage suit has been hooray, hooray, though truth ed any place as long as the monfiled in Third District Court as ey kept rolling in," Shubert said compels us to add that some have result of an auto-truccollision been written just in case, and with a smile. She never put on on Nov. 5 at Ninth East and for a performance they may leap out and bite us her make-uTwenty-seventSouth Streets. until the check for that perany minute. Defendant named (n the action, formance was in her hand! With the passing of burlesque brought' by Arthur J. Wagstaff, is Frank Latino. Mr. Latino was and vaudeville, the greatest trainthe driver of a truck, the .coming schools for the legitimate plaint said, which was parked theater have also disappeared in on Ninth East Street near Shubertg opinion. At least 75 per cent of the competent actors without theSouth Street at 'TUght proper placing of and actresses who once performflares .and without parking ed on Broadway were graduates lights. The plaintiff said that his of 'burlesque and vaudeville, he son, Nathan H. Wagstaff, a mii, estimates He snorts scornfully Howard, Nora Bayes, Irene nor, drove his car Into the parkMarie Dressier, at the mere mention of the sumFrank ed truck as a result of the demer theater or barn-yar- d Mack, Marilyn Miller, Frank Tin-becircuit fendants negligence and e as a William Faversham, Bea Litfor acting talent tle and Texas Guinan are Jn the- - amountof only OUT OF BUSINESS a tiny fraction of the stellar William Favorsham was prob-.abl- y damages asked. the greatest matinee idol personalities who have been un-dever under Shubert aegis, Shu-- , Shubert management. "We always kept a pocket full bert, who deals em close to the of twenty-dolla- r vest, said after considerable regold pieces hanflection: . dy for Gaby Dcslys,.. Shubert KENNY FRANCES remembered. "When we were orv The day A print my memoirs, KFB - IANGFSRB tour; she never even registered TO be out of this business, he y "HIT PARADE OF 1941" at a hotel before she went to added cautiously. --In We FmIui- church. She always wanted The Even after fifty' years on 'TURNABOUT gold pieces to give the parish Broadway, Shubert has no clear idea of what the public really priest. St. Anthony was her saint. I remember. wants in the way of entertain"I guest you would call her ment. a glamour girl now. She was If l knew what people want--- C L really very nice. She was a tiny ed, he sighed today, Id have woman, and she had personality. ' more money than Rockefeller. CASE CHANT MARTHA SCOTT he couldnt do very Otheiwise, much on the' stage. But the audi'Tha Howards of Virginia" ence wanted, to see the woman COLOR NEWS who had cost the king of PortuCARTOON FLASHES gal his throne, bq that was all Tomorrows Recital he - absolute-convincer- Suit Asks Accident Damages , k p So far our patriots seem to h Shubert Would Bounce Unions And Critics To Revi ve Theater BY INEZ ROB News Service (International Staff Writer) The Deseret News. Hayes, actor son Of the bride, and his bride of six weeks,Ac. dress Mary Healy. Among those in the wedding party was Mrs. Hugh Herbert, wife of the movie actor. WeinerschnitzelOnMenu Sure Sign Were Not At War BY DAMON RUNYAN Copyright 1941, King Features Syndicate, Inc., Distributed By International News Service Some folks are saying that the United States is already in the war, but we think this statement is a slight exaggeration. We have been looking around carefully and we see none of the signs and symptoms characteristic of our patriots when we are in a war. We have not seen a single patriot chasing a little Alfred-Hitchc- divorce. Witnesses were r Herbert Marshall la offering some parental advice for he appears as Laraine Days father in Walter the new .Wangers Foreign Correspondent, thriller which will he released at the Utah Theater on Saturday. Miss Day has her first starring role in the "picture and plays opposite Joel McCrea. "Foreign Correspondent was selected as one of the ten best pictures of the year by Louella Parsons of studio composer and her former stage accompanist, were married early today in a chartered airliner as it flew over Las Vegas. The ceremony was performed by Justice of the Peace Mahlon Brown. Both gave their ages as 37, and each listed a previous Romancing? ' Coming To Utah Theater LAS "VEGAS, Nev, Jan. 21. (AP) Grace Hayes, veteran stage and vaudeville actress, now operator of a Hollywood night club, and Newell Chase, movie Mill, one-nig- y. ' The Westerner,?4 with Gary Walter Brennan, Fred Btora and Loris Davenport; also Cnuaual Occupation,'- UTAH The Son of Hoot Crista, with Louis Hayward, Joan Bennett and Georf Sanders; also, Christmas in July," with Dick PoyaU, ilen Drew and Walter Demareet. CAPITOL 'Romance of the Bio Grande, with Cesar Bomero, Patriaa Morison, Ricardo Cortes; also A Lit tie a Bit of Heaven," Robert with Bison, Stuart Erwin and Billy filbert, VICTORY Knute Rdekno ican." with Pat O'Brien, Gale Paire, Ronald Reayan and Donald Crisp: 1 Lone so, ' Bury, Me Not On the Tralrto," with Joh&ny Mach Brown and Fussy Kniyht, STUDIO Comrade X, with Clark 0 Oscar Homolka, ble, Hedy Lamarr, Arden. Fslia Br art and-Xva ART-k (Surarhou) G Pride and arson and Prejudice,' with Greer Laurence Oliver; also, Here Comes The Navy," with James Cayney and pat O'Brien. The OEM Howards of Vlrrinia, with Cary Grant, Martha Scott, Sir Cedric Hardwicks, Alan Marshall and Bichard Carlson. MURRAY Hit Parade of 1M1," with Kenny Baker and Frances Lanflgrd; al Ttmiabo! t Cooper, old-tim- , No- there. Paramount haealready sent a location company to Mexico for exteriors Tor For Whom the Bells Toll and 20th Centuhas shot additional ry-Fox scenes for Blood and Sand - a Spanish student. e e How long ago It seems since Wallace Beery made "Viva-Vil- la In Mexico and Lee Tracys capers body ever knew just what happened but after Viva Villa no went American film company Conditions there on- - location. have now changed and the ban current has been lifted with-thMexican government extending a cordial invitation to American to make pictures companies withis the latest to enroll as dh G CENTRE who has been .sick In New York with the flu at Doctors Hospital, telephoned his mother today that he is feeling better. Margaret Wycherly, olie of New Yorks finest actresses, will play Sergeant Yorks (Gary Cooper) mother In , "Sergeant Alvih York". . Horace Heldt is one of the lucky ones who made his money and saved It. After he finishes his engagement at the Biltmore he .plans to retire and live on a ranch in the valley. . . A new church, Our Lady of Peace, was -- dedieatedtn Ban Fernando Val ley Sunday and Archbishop Cant well, in an excellent talk, spoke of the ranchers who had made this 'tiny edifice possible In what had been, a short time ago, a veritable no mans land r- Snapshots of Hollywood Collected at Randomt The Barbara von- - Reventlow datror Hutton e Saturday night was like an Hollywood party before the the town got so big. Everyone had such a good time no one made a move to leave until nearly four oclock. Gary Grant and Connie Moore took time out to look at their birthday presents which ranged from a monkey on a hand organ and a silly rag doll to expensive gifts. Talked with Tallulah Bankhead and she told me she .plays 87 more times stands before she many finishes The - Little Foxes." Marlene Dietrich created a sensation when she walked in Wearing a dress from her picture an Lady - From New Orleans 1840 creation with her hair plied on top of her head in the fashion of that era. Hedy Lamarr spent her time between John Howard and Reginald Gardiner, who was in great form as usual. Thats all for today. See you to- Our Hollywood stars and producers are studying Spanish with the idea of going to South good-wion tour America now being planned. . Mary Pick-for- d and Sylvia Fairbanks, Who were at Barbara Hutton von Reventlow's party, . discussed their South American studies and ideas at great length.- Mary fesves with Buddy Rogers next, month and Sylvia, who has just started Spanish, ,wlll take the h trip with Constance Bennett. Schenck is studying every day and so are, dozens of other prominent men and women in the industry. Jock Whitney, who has been so active on Americas defense program, talked for a Yr lAft-GeiN- four decades. Only last week, the critics wielded: the knife and ccalpel bo mercilessly on a Shubert show that, while the deration was successful, the patient literally died on the table. "One Night Of Love folded up like a tent in a high wind after a few performances. Critics shouldnt be permitted to write their personal opinions, In - Shuberta opinion. They ought to has their judgement on the audience reaction, not on their ownl If we had paid any attention to the critics a few years ago. wed have closed Hellzapop-pinth- e day after it opened. And look at it now! And that is where Shubert has "the critics by the hair. For The only Broad way production now under the 'Shubert ageis. is a hardy perennial which promises to survive all of its detractors. ' ' FOUND IT GOOD In more mellow mood, Shubert looked back over a long and active life in the theater and found It good. He has produced more than 1,000 plays. Scarcely a famous thespian in the last, forty years but has been associated at .some time with himself and his brother. In their special and be. loved theatim The Winter Gap-dethey originated the musical extravaganzas that hav4 since beentyplral nf .Broadway and the -- American stage. . . Sarah Bernhardt, Gaby Des-lythe Dolly .Nistinguette, Ethel, John and Lionel Bar rymore, Eddie Cantor, Al Jolson, Joe Cook, Willi-- ; and . Eugene "Helz-apoppi- 1 Sis-ter- s, Twen--Ty-seven- -- Bor-don- sustain-edJnjurie- hot-hous- s. Sfs-OBRIE- Jl pa-tro- n G5 right Fanny Brice, who has done all right hi the Intervening years,, was a maid, with scarcely more than a walkon part. In Honeymoon Express," starring Des-lv- s 30 years ago. PLAY IN TENT Those weie the good, old days when the Shuberts took Sarah Bernhardt on a nation-widtour. The . powerful theatrical syndicate that controlled leglsimate theaters throughout the United States in those days, had a mad on at the Shuberts. So the Shutent with berts carried a circus Ithem, and when they - couldn't hire a hall, the "Divine Sarah" played In the cirque tent to au- - WALTZ TONITE Your ft with loti ekisN to a to ticket, ticket purchased, tor the Bl Annlv e r a r k r Sene, Thandar, January 13rd. e cocc;:ut GROVEn -- .. COMING MONDAY, IAN. 17 . . JANaFlJRINI . - , AND HIS ORCHESTRA . DANCING FLOOR SHOW . stv i r.a WASATCH PLUNGE SPRINGS Constant Bow of warm sparkling mineral water. (705,000 gallons) every day. Pools drained, scrubbed. disinfected dally. summer swimming pleasure in the winter. Enfoy Phone MIS? Ith NO. & 2ND W. GREER LAbT PAY I CARSON S LAWRENCE OLIVER "PRIDE AND PREJUDICE' Alee Tamee Cagny, A Fat O'Briea la 'HERE COMES THE NAVY' |