OCR Text |
Show THE Thursday, October 12, 1933 TIMES-NEW- Canadian Unemployed in Protest Parade . THESOLDIERS DONT f" '..Ml i n CO HUN" SHOULD Wt WM&WHY PAGE THREE NEPIH. UTAH S, 1 Scenes and Persons in the Current News -- f '" mmm wii.hi.iiim m JWf t'ff W v v BEVERLT HILLS Ont of th with pleasant things connected worktn lo th movies U that you re all the time UDnlng Into ac- tors and friends from the stage ! day, folks btrentin maby but used that to you seen years, you know and play on the bill with In vaudeville, or In I SB a show. There Is r l just any amount of them live out s here In Cal. for when you wipe out "FT" a whole (reat Industry, the greatest creative branch that amusement even produced. In my last released picture called "Dr Bull" worked with me an old 1 Scene In La Salle street, Chicago, when President Kooscvelt arrived there to address the American. timer, one of the unique characters organization of the American of not only one amusement line but Legion convention. 2 Float In the big parade of the 40 and 8, the Kobert L. Lotspeleh, American, who was killed during bloody battle at the National hotel, Havana, two. H waa not of the stage, he Legion. was dratted from another line of Cuba. recreation. He bad become the best known base ball player of his gen eration, be It was who really Introduced so called "Color" into our na tional pastime. A ball player was lust a man with a suit on, and a bat, but when Mike Donlln joined the Giants away along about 1904 or thereabouts, he was the Babe Ruth of bis time. He couldent knock as many balls out of the park as Babe, but he could knock more men out of it. He could take a short arm jab, and bunt some bolsterlous spectator from the front row to the last. In those days of the McGraw team you played one Inning and fought two. When you slid Into a base you slid Into a fight. An umpire waved you out with one hand and warded off a swinging bat with the other. When an umpire yelled you are out, he had to look quick to tell who was out, him or the player. We had a great stage corned ianne . In those days, Mabel Hite. I think Mabel was from Kansas City originally. Well there Is few funny women. Come to think about it there Is few funny men, but there has al ways been a scarcity of women Mabel was big favor ite. In musical comedy the greatest of her time. She fell In love with Mike at the helghth of his wonderChancellor Entrelbert Dollfuss, wounded the other day by an assassin, Is here seen at the race track In ful carrer. She had a sketch in Vienna announcing the creation of a Fascist state for Austria on the Italian model. vaudeville with Walter Jones, a splendid comedian. I played on the i bill with them with my old pony, and Buck McKee, an ex Oklahoma Sheriff that rode the pony across the stage for me to rope at, and lives on a ranch In Cal today. Along ahout that time Betty Blake down in Rogers Ark., had a mental relapse and said "Yes" after several solid years of "No's." She threw her lot with "Buck" and I, and the pony "Terry." From cheap hotels to dark . . . stage door entrances, she trudged Mike. Mabel We met and her way. We played on the bill with em, they the big headliners and drawing cards, my act put in just to make it so it read "Ten acts of vaudeville." Mabel is dead, died just a few years after that, at the heighth of her career, but my wife will never forget her kindness to us, for you J I -- UW-'tx must remember there was "Class" i-life' 1 t In vaudeville as well as In society, and for an "Act" to visit a head' liner was an event. Mike carried on as best he could. Bad health, bad luck, but always that something that made him the real fighter. He was tremendously ' fortunate In his next marriage. A ' much beautiful younger, girl, girl daughter of one of the stages shining lights of their day, a great Edward Field Sanford, Jr., put: vaudeville team, Ross and Fenton. ting the finishing touches on the She stuck with Mike through many statue "Victory," which is to be ups and downs, and an awful lot of placed over the main doorway of downs among the few ups. He did the new monumental Payne Whit some splendid things on the stage. IISJI.iL)iilSil gymnasium at Yale university. He was always natural in anything ney measures over eight feet statue The The United States army has prepared a winter uniform for the civhe did. . In height and embodies the spirit of ilian conservation corps men who will spend the coming winter working He had been out here In pictures physical prowess and sobriety In in woodlands throughout the country. Each uniform consists of a navy for years. Everybody liked him victory, and typifies young Amerileather windbreaker and sleeveless Jerkin of O." D. blue lumberjacket, Everybody used can manhood. A crowned winter cap with visor and ear tabs that tie melton cloth. high TEN ACTS him when they under the chin, and hide mittens with woolen Inner mittens are other i MIKE DON LIN had the chance. Items of the outfit, while rubber soled overshoes take care of the feet. MINISTER TO EGYPT he Everything In the photograph the man on the left Is wearing the cap, leather kW Mnr ootii did was 0. K. To and hide gloves, while on the right is illustrated the O. D. cloth see him sitting jerkin. 1 LMuinw HIW around day after day on our "Set" (as we call the Three-Cornere- d place where we 1 r i"n fr ft v.. . X1 l g Id protest against the Invasion of the city of Stratford, Ontario, by the militia, following strikes, thouof a mile long. The police hurried the marchers past the sands of persons held a parade nearly armories where the soldiers and tanks, objected to by the people, were sheltered. three-quarter- s Air View of Tampico After Storm and Flood .II...IIM x . .... " ' i Dollfuss Announcing Austrian Fascist State A I ifi. flrmK An almlane view of one section of the city of Tampico, Mexico, showing how the streets were tnundated oy several feet of water following the rain and hurricane In which millions of dollars worth of damage was done and an indeterminate number of persons lost their lives. Most of the buildings In the city were razed. GOLD HOLDER Parade of the Legion in Chicago mflitef for yale gymnasium .y-- v. eft, w wWK jew Winter Garb for Forest Army f If I teW he was holding. Tie was determined to test the constitutionality of the executive order to turn In all hoarded gold. BUCKEYE END The American Legion, In convention in Chicago, staged the greatest parade in Its history. In the line down Michigan avenue to Soldier Held marched 120,000 men with countless musical organizations and many fine floats. iXrTA J happen to be In New York's va n fIi fwf A Sid Gillman, of Ohio State's football team, plays at end and Is an expert on both attack and defense. View upstream showing the nearly completed Arizona spillway of BouWer dam, through which the Colorado river will be diverted. Something; Different "Did you know I'd become nn actor?" "No, but I heard you'd gone on the stage." Dublin Opinion, Fight working). Here was sometimes maby a hundred j e o p 1 there with him, all kinds and all types of S3&" f 4 Irif-- ' folks on a movie "Set." Yet there 1 he sat, joking and laughing. Health very bad, maby in actual pain There was out of that hundred, perhaDs nintv. or more people that never heard one speck of applause, (for them personally in their lives) yet here sit this fellow, who maby meant nothing to them, who had day after day. year after year, had thousands rise when he come to bat. had had audiences cheer for actual minutes, when he come on the stage, Bert Fish of De Land, Fla., who Here he was, looking for no sym I 1 I been appointed American minhas , sore not no alabi's, pathy, offering to ister Egypt. at sore at the world, not anybody, just a kindly soul who hadent raised Precipitation his hands in combat In thirty years. A rainfall of one inch Is equal to "Peace on Earth" Mike Donlin that Mere are the three candidates for the mayoralty of New Tork. Left was your motto. You lived game and 100 tons of water to the acre. It to rij;ht, 12 they are: Klnrello H. I.a Guardia, fuslor,; Joseph McKee, Indeof vou died game. about Inches takes a snowfall U Vat, tit Sjmdicatt, Inc. 19 to equal one inch of rain. pendent Democrat; John P. O'Urlen, organization Democrat. s k lis wind-break- New Bed for the Colorado River Wt ... St' fc aA Frederick B. Campbell, a New York attorney, who was indicted by a federal grand jury for failure to register $200,574 in gold which 'J V y uJMs mtMl 1 rf N&pi s 1 IHs)' Syr.- 5 prifill I H lif 3i " fX' f |