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August, 1934 21 %J\ Louise Bates tylolvers 456 North Beverly Drive BEVERLY HILLS, CALIF. Phone OXford 5412 Paul Curtis Auctioneer ¥ Beverly Galleries 3578 Wilshire Boulevard FEderal 5544 - FEderal 8812 Furniture . ♦ . Upholstered Refinished Repaired CUSTOM WORK Phone OXford 2398 for estimate IRA B. WOFFORD 436 North Canon Drive BEVEREY HIDES Death Rattle (Continued From Page Twenty-six) Writer Ralph Block, alternate Gladys Leh¬ man; John Emerson, alternate Rupert Hughes; Dudley Nichols, alternate Seton I. Miller; James Gleason, alternate John Natteford; Waldemar Young, alternate Courtenay Terrett. Producer Irving Thalberg, alternate Hal Wal¬ lis; Darryl Zanuck, alternate Samuel Goldwyn; I. E. Chadwick, alternate Larry Darmour; Henry Henigson, alter¬ nate Harry Cohn; Sol Wurtzel, alternate Merritt Hulburd. For the Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences, the Screen Actors 7 Guild and the Screen Writers 7 Guild need have little to say. The Academy has passed its own death sentence and is singing its own funeral dirge. But to the producers of the business, the two Guilds, the most powerful talent organizations in the. industry, have this to say: The time has gone by when trickery can be used to defeat the just requirements of those who create ' the pictures shown on the screen of America. The producers of the business have al¬ ready aroused a hostile and suspicious public opinion among the American peo¬ ple, by tactics for which they alone are responsible. Actors and writers in the industry desire to meet them frankly, honestly and sincerely on a new ground of genuine cooperation, with no knives hidden under the table. It is up to the producers to decide whether they are willing to enter into negotiations in an equally fair and responsible spirit. Job Lots ((Continued From Page Nineteen) with their hands over their mouths . . . Liam 0 7 Flaherty, slightly Irish, drop¬ ping in to see Gardner James at his Irish Book Shop . . . and Elizabeth Cobb, a “chip off the old block, 77 which, of course, happens to be Irvin . . . and Karen Morley is entertaining some hun¬ gry writers at M-G-M . . . and Herbert Yardley, author of “The American Black Chamber, 77 who says he met at M-G-M one of the men whose activities he watched most closely during the war. . . . The man was William von Brincken, former German military attache, in¬ terned from San Francisco on suspicion of being a spy . . . and now a successful actor . . . Martin Heflin, editor of the well-known midwestern publication, The Bandwagon, visiting here from Okla¬ homa. She Leaned Against a Show Case Glendon at Telephones Kinross in Crestview 0839 The Village WLA 356-36 Metals . . . Glass ... Dinner Services ... Sheffield . . . Lamps .. . China . . . Decor . . . Arts . . . Crystal . . . Stemware mesTW®i>