a THE MICHIGAN DAILY 1 1 SCREEN A, i 1i Ii Four stars - mustn't miss; three stars very good; two stars - an average picture; one star - poor; no star - don't go. AT THE MICHIGAN Double Feature "LADY TUBBS" A Universal picture, starring Alice Brady. with Anita Louise, Douglass Montgomery. June Clay- worth, Alan Mowbray, and Hedda Hopper. Also a Paramount newsreel. Once this gets under way it is sprightly enough, although it has little that is novel to offer. Hettie Tubbs (Alice Brady), cook in a railroad construction camp, inherits half a million dollars from an Englishman she once befriended. With the aid of this fortune she sets out to further the romance of her niece (Anita Louise) with Philip Ash-Orcutt (Douglass Montgomery), son of the railroad-owning, aristocratic Ash-Orcutts. Most of the fun comes when she, not yet a very accomplished protege of her English lawyer-friend (Alan Mowbray), returns from Europe as Lady Tubbs, the guest of honor of the Ash-Orcutts. The most depressing scenes are disposed of early. Alice Brady, in attempting to do anything besides portray a flighty, half-shrewd, half-scat- terbrained woman, is very bad. Douglass Montgomery gives the usual impres- sion of still being somewhat damp behind the ears. Anita Louise is pretty. All are satisfactory. Most interesting sequence: Lady Tubbs riding to hounds. The newsreel is uneventful. -R.A.C. * * * * "PEOPLE WILL TALK" A Paramount picture with Charles Ruggles, Mary Boland, Leila Hyams, and Dean Jaggers. Another pleasant comedy, but equally lacking in novelty. Charles Ruggles and Mary Boland are two of the most capable comedians in Hollywood, but this is obviously an uninspired effort, although they make most of it amusing, of course. When their daughter (Leila Hyams) and son- in-law (Dean Jaggers) fall out over "another woman" the two set out, by quarreling themselves, to show the youngsters how foolishi they are. The wandering plot eventually has Charles Ruggles himself placed in compromising cir- cumstances with the woman, being mauled badly as referee in a charity wrestling, show, etc. If you gave odds of 100-1 (as anyone would feel confident in doing) that Charles Ruggles would ap- pear drunk in one or more scenes, you win. -R.A.C. As Others See NOTICE PERSONAL laundry service. We tal HAVING acquired land on Ore Lake individual interest in the laundr and Huron river, I invite you to problems of our customers. Girl spend a day with us. Enjoy our silks, wools, and fine fabrics gua fresh spring water. Hard sand anteed. Men's shirts our specialt beach. Boating unlimited. Water Call for and deliver. Phone 559 frontage at $150 and up. Repre- 611 E. Hoover. 3x sentatives on property. e EXPERIENCED LAUNDRESS doin only. E. J. Reive. Ore Lake View suetadfml ahns Sub. 32 student and faly washings. call for and deliver. Phone 486 FOR SALE . .2x ORIGINAL ETCHING BY DUBAIN- N-(FRENCH ARTIST) SCENE LUXEMBURG GARDENS - $10 FRAMED. U L R IC H'S BOOK- The TERRACE STORE, CORNER EAST AND SOUTH UNIVERSITY. adjoining - e WANTED Union Ballroom INSTRUCTOR wants room or small apartment where small dog will not is a CoolSpot be objectionable. For fall term. Box 1.f. '- x LAUNDRY LAUNDRY. 2-1044. Sox Careful work at low price. ' Now Showing - ANN HARDING "THE FLAME WITHIN" and EDNA MAE OL IVER "1MURDER O0N A HONdEY- MOON"J Tomorrow The Quinces of Goofydom, Bert Wheeler and Robert Woolsey I' Lydia MENDELSSOHN Theatre erry We Roll Along -GEORGE S. KAUFMAN and MOSS HART TonT rrow Night,8:30 P.M. Carrying Civilization To Ethiopia TALY'S ACTIVITY in East Africa, Signor Mus- solmi said recently, is to impose a "harmonious regime" on Ethiopia. And he added: We consider our mission in Ethiopia is sincerely and definitely to abolish slavery and promote the work of civilization. It is interesting to note that Il Duce has discov- ered a new means of obtaining "harmony" and promoting civilization in Ethiopia. A chemical has been developed, says an an- nouncement from Rome, which will burn up the feet of the Ethiopians, who fight barefooted. And even if the Ethiopians wear shoes, the announce- ment adds, "this chemical will burn off the shoes." -New York Post. Mosquitoes THAT OBNOXIOUS and infinitesimal pest de- signated in the dictionary as a "certain dip- terous insect of the family Culicidae," but better known as a mosquito, is again the object of search and research. Authorities inform us that the first extensive notice given to these tiny nuisances was at the end of the nineteenth century, when certain facts pointed conclusively to their rela- tion to yellow fever. Now it looks as if some 999,975 female mosquitoes had outwitted all efforts of the Des Plaines Valley mosquito abatement district to investigate the migratory habits of these ladies. And until this is decided it will not be clear just where the erad- icators should focus their efforts. To be specific, 1,000,000 mosquitoes in an out- lying Chicago district were sprayed with green dye and turned loose. Catchers with bared arms were assigned to 40 radius posts for five minutes each day and the nippers who accepted the lure were caught and held for observation. Since the beginning of the experiment, in May, those who got bit state that only 25 of those subjected to the wearing o' the green officiated. The others ap- parently concluding that it was just an old skin game, are still at bay. Despite the dismal results, the county au- thorities in Illinois sprayed the mosquitoes in two other marshes with. red and purple dye. Again they were unsuccessful at keeping them "down on the farm." Perhaps the former variety should now be sought in Russia. Maybe those dipped in royal purple have been foolish enough to fly to the bayous of Louisiana and join the share-the-welt plan. Anyway, why not equip the next batch with neon lights? In the dark that would give both the mosquito and his victim an even break. -Washington Post. Killers In Illinois And Michigan THREE tight-lipped young men, the oldest-25, the youngest 19 years old, walked to the elec- tric chair in the Menard penitentiary early Tues- day morning. The mental agony which they suf- fered as they went to their death was a harsh spec- tacle, as all executions are, but not half so cruel i The Reliable Source of Information for NmeAddresses, Telephone Numbers of all Faculty Members and Students on theCampus .. El By Campus Salesmen, News Stands Bookstores and at the Student Pub- lications Build ing, Maynard Street. I