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July 04, 1935 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1935-07-04

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

'THE MICHIGAN DAILY

SCREEN
Four stars - mustn't miss: three stars - very good;
two stars - an average picture; one star - poor; no
star _ don't go.

LAUNDRY NOTICE
STUDENT Hand Laundry. Prices rea- CONTRACT BRIDGE: Games - l
sonable. Free delivery. Phone 3006. sons - beginners' duplicate grout
4x ar (I"l* k _ P -980 2

AT THE MAJESTIC
Double Feature
"MARY JANE'S PA"

**

,0

I

A Warner picture starring Aline McMahon and
Guy Kibbee with Tom Brown. Also a Hearst news-
reel.
The usually helpless and blundering Guy Kibbee
comes to the rescue of the usually hyper-resource-
ful Aline McMahon in "Mary Jane's Pa." Other-,
wise, it is a typical Kibbee-McMahon picture.
Unable to resist his wanderlust, Kibbee leaves
his wife, two children, and the newspaper he was
publishing in Silvertown; Colo., for Paris, Australia
and points East.
Eleven years later, as a barker in a carnival
he gives a child a ride on the elephant, finds
out that she is his daughter, and that his wife, the
successful publisher of the town's newspaper, is
waging a somewhat bitter political struggle. Elec-
tion night finds her facing a crisis, and his yeoman
work in those tense moments brings their recon-
ciliation.
Both Kibbee and McMahon are as capable as
usual, while the girl who plays ,Mary Jane, their
daughter, although no Shirley Temple, is very
good.
There is nothing outstanding in the newsreel.
-R.A.C.

LAUNDRY. 2-1044. Sox darned.
Careful work at low price. 1x }
PERSONAL laundry service. We take
individual interest in the laundry
problems of our' customers. Girls'
silks, wools, and fine fabrics guar-
anteed. Men's shirts our specialty.
Call for and deliver. Phone 5594.
611 E. Hoover. 3x
EXPERIENCED LAUNDRESS doing
student and family washings. Will
call for and deliver. Phone 4863.
2x..
FOR SALE
ORIGINAL ETCHING BY DUBAIN-
N1-(FRENCH ARTIST) SCENE
LUXEMBURG GARDENS -- $10
FRAMED. U L R I C H'S .BOOK-
STORE, CORNER EAST AND
SOUTH UNIVERSITY.
AGE PREVAILS IN BERLIN
BERLIN - (P) - One-fourth of
Berlin's 4,242,500 inhabitants are
more than 50 years old. A new official
report says deaths and a low birth
rate during the World War are re-
sponsible for this large proportion of
residents of advanced yeas.

"VAGABOND LADY"

4

a

16

A Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer picture with Evelyn
Venable, Robert Young, Berton Churchill, and
Reginald Denny.
Outside of a most unexpected fight between
Robert Young and Evelyn Venable, in which both
are pushed over chairs, slugged on the jaw, hit
over the head with cooking utensils, but suddenly
end up by kissing and plighting their love, "Vaga-
bond Lady" is a boring offering.
Miss Venable, long a friend of the Spear family,
department store tycoons, is expected to marry the
"right" one of the two sons, but she loves the
"wrong" one. But, as usually happens in these pic-
tures, a series of misunderstandings between her
and the one she really loves drives her into giv-
ing her consent to the wrong person.
After this stage in the plot has been reached,
action in these pictures chiefly centers in getting
those who really love each other paired off. The
tooth and claw battle between Miss Venable and
Mr. Young helps quite a bit but it is also neces-
sary to convince the one she intended to marry
that he shouldn't want a wife who chewed gum
drops. This is seen to.
Although the producers themselves don't treat
their subject very seriously, "Vagabond Lady" is
pretty tedious fare most of the way.
Neither Young nor Venable are very good ac-
tors, and Berton Churchill is cast in his usual
"type" role. Reginald Denny is good. -R.A.C.

Never before has the
BLUE LANTERN
presented such an array of
Talent and Entertainment!

III

I.

THE MOST DANCEABLE OF
AMERICA'S DANCE BANDS

II

The SOAP BOX

NIGHTLY EXCEPT MONDAY
ADMISSION 40c

II

Letters published in this column should not be
construed as expressing the editorial opinion of The
Daily. Anonymous contributions will be disregarded.
The names of communicants will, however, be regarded
as confidential upon request. Contributors are asked
to be brief, the editor reserving the right to condense
all letters of over 300 words and to accept or reject
letters upon the criteria of general editorial importance
and interest to the, campus.
Facts This Time
To the Editor:
It is very evident that information pertaining to
the wages paid the employes of the Superior Dairy
Store has been collected from very unreliable
sources. In your issue of July 2nd, the letter of
Elmer Akers states "The young men and young
women who serve to us the ice cream and other
foods in the Superior Dairy Store are paid sixteen
cents an hour. This statement is absolutely false
and the writer will gladly interview any individual
who is interested enough in our business to call
for an appointment.
Our wage schedule for stores runs from twenty
to thirty cents per hour with food furnished while
on duty. No one has ever received less than twenty
cents per hour from a Superior Dairy Store, which
has supplied work for unemployed people and has
given the people their money's worth in quality,
quantity and sanitation.
In my mind the quickest cure for any depres-
sion and the greatest asset to any business is more
initiative and hard work on our own job and less
attention on the other fellow. It's easy to talk out
of turn.
-C.R.Stull,
Manager Superior Dairy Co.

&I

(-91

As Others See It

E

For Mercy's Sake!
SENATOR BAKER of the state legislature is not
yet satisfied that the schools of Illinois are not
secretly run by the Soviets in Russia.
William Randolph Hearst is not yet satisfied
that Mr. Baker is wrong.
Goodness! There is an old saying about where
there is smoke there is fire. If these gentlemen
insist, they surely must have some cause for their
contentions.
Gracious! Maybe these summer mixers are real-
ly the first step towards a proletarian revolution.
And those educational movies have for their secret
purpose the glorification of Communism.
And think! Suppose the Woman's League teas
were really serving vodka disguised.
Mercy! President Hutchins probably wears a
red undedshirt.
Worse and worse! The University Senate prob-
nh0 1..T., n f af r l n,4r, ihf in'n a cna 4. oK', n ... ..a

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