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Show : RECORD WAVE OF ECONOMY SWEEPS HOLLYWOOD ' known tine 1928. A fellow buyer congratulated him and inquired whether Boaa Adam Glmbel had made any comment. "Oh. ure," the aaoc awful on aid sarcastically. "He cam up to the department, put his arm around ma and said: That's just great, fallow and then the bell rant and wok m up" . . . The second buyer eouldnt resist repeating re-peating the tale . . . Two days later, the first buyer was in his department when Mr. Glmbel walked up, put hi arm around i 'him, and said: That's lust treat ' fellow. Now, do you hear any bell ringing T" Repraetng Plata Dept! In the film, "Good Girls Co to Paris," a poor girl taken Into a rich, unhappy un-happy home (filled with whacky people) straightens everything out . . . The film, "Fifth Avenue Girl.'' had practically the same story, and on th air the other evening "She Married Her Boss'' was a ditto . . . A great churchman and a great i coats . . . "Hey, Butch t" teased a 1 show gal. "are you being affectionate affec-tionate with a furrier ?" "No," she said simply, "I'm being affectionate with everybody!" Retnralag chorus girls and actors confirm the reports that Hollywood studios have laid off or discharged hundreds of contract con-tract players and others In t h e stiffest economy wave in a long spell ... "Is it really that bad out there r one of us asked a former for-mer Broadway chorine, who laatad ' two years In the movie sector . . .' "Haven't you heard?" she replied. "Things are so tough In Hollywood why even the biggest magnates have taken 125 cut!" Don't Tell Osama Beswell you've read the one about the two refugee dachshunds. She wants to see If he remembers It herself . . . Anyhow, Any-how, they met In Central Park and one remarked how swell things were in America, "Isn't It wonderful." wonder-ful." said the first dachshund, "green trees, grass, lots of hy- ' drants and lamp posts, and none of those damned storm troopers kicking kick-ing you around. Oh, It's so much better ever here than In Berlin, don't you think?" "Oh. I dunno," replied the other dachshund. "In Berlin wa had a beautiful house on the Unter dan Linden, plenty of servants and a motor car. And besides In Berlin I was a St Bernard!" Last week one of th buyers In Saks Fifth Avenue had the most ucoeaaful sale his department had ' American died last week ... George Cardinal Mundelein Is dead, but th scope of his vision and of his tolerance are well measured In the words of another good man Bishop Shell of Chicago, wa praised th work of Cardinal Mundelein Mun-delein by denouncing ethers with these words: "Everyone who preach race hatred among us In a world at war Is traitor to our lonely democracy. He menaces our moral unity. He divides our previous strength. No man can be both honest and intelligent, who pretends that he want to safe, guard peace In America, while at the same time he stirs up race hatred which has destroyed peso everywhere else In th world." Copyright. 183s, Pally Mirror ; Walter WincheU J The print papers f a aub re- ' Nnrapapermaa staff: The foreign for-eign news coverage business lent and wont be so good in this war, according to experts on the sub-j sub-j Ject, Tor th news services It has never been much good . . . One out-fit out-fit paid weekly wagee of 25 and " (35, to live In Barcelona and Ma-drid Ma-drid for months, under dally bom-,. bom-,. bardmentt and hideous living conditions con-ditions . . . Lawrence Pernsworth of the Times, who was on specs. n collected aU of $89 for his final month with that gazette. He went " to the Spanish war front every " dawning, and a vary dangerous ana " It was, too. He had to travel over long road, strafed by plana, back to Barcelona to writ his dispatch, " and walk two miles from his houe ' through darkened streets to ean-" ean-" aorship. etc . , . Webb Miller of " United Pre yi glory should be enough. As far as w know, none of th services insures their men . . . When Jay Alien covered the early months of the war in Spain, his Chicago publisher Insured htm for 130,000 . . . Leland Stow. 10 year . with th N. V. Herald Trlbuna, hoped to (o abroad when the war . crisis began ... He was told he was too old to cover wart . . And o he quit to become London cor-""" cor-""" "respondent for the Chicago Pally News . . . Mrs. Reid. the Herald. Trtb publisher, expressed great surprise when she heard that people peo-ple on the Trtb considered Stowe a has-been. She urged him to stay, but he wanted action over there . . . . Stow, sine 1835, was unhappy cutting paper dolls over at the Trio .... la 1933 he made a trip to Germany and upon his return , wrote a book called: "Natl Germany Ger-many Wants War" . . . Borne of his , editors considered It very funny . . . , It must be a satisfaction to Stow ts know hs was sin years ahead ef . his betters. "Batch" Blgheo is th most out-' out-' spoken of th beauties on Broadway Broad-way . . . Last night La Bif be was burning up bar charlne-colieagu by parading backsUg at th Pla-mond Pla-mond Horseshoe with four new fur |