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MORE SATISFACTION - By George Clark | OUR SEASONS ARE ALL OF DIFFERENT LENGTHS: SPRING = 92. DAYS 2! HOURS SUMMER = 93 AUTUMN = 89 89 ” ” ” 14 18 ! WINTER = AFRICAN: MONKEY, HAS A COLLIE - LIE BRUSHY TAM IN AN EXPERIMENT ON MILITARY EXPLOSIVES, A 3-INCH COMMON STEEL SHELL WAS FOUND TO HAVE BURST INTO 2,378 Pieces! AT THE ; MOVIES “Night Flight” Is A Vital Picture) The tremendous drama behind that | air-mail letter you received this morn- | ing is the theme of the M-G-M pic- | ture in which John Barrymore, Helen Hayes, Clark Gable, Lionel Barrymore, | Robert Montgomery and Myrna Loy; ‘will be seen starting today at the Par- | amount Theater. The story is “Night Flight.” It ‘was written by a famous air mail pilot, Antoine de Saint-Exupery. While it) 4s laid in South America, over highly | dangerous sea and mountain routes, its drama is being repeated daily on} @ dozen lines within the continental | ‘United States. | The tale was directed by Clarence | Brown, himself a licensed transport pilot. Brown stated recently, “I did not make any airplane pictures before ‘Night Flight’ because I felt all pre-~ vious air stories had been syntheti¢ and unimportant. This story breathes reality.’ It combines both the drama of flight, and the pathos of the wives who must remain on the ground. To my mind it is the greatest air story ever written.” aI Other players in the piece include; ‘William Gargan, C. Henry Gordon, | Leslie Fenton, Harry Beresford, Frank Conroy and Ralf Harolde. The pic- ture is the second to be made at M- G-M by David O. Selznick, vice-presi- dent. It was adapted by Oliver H. P. Garrett and a strong musical score ‘was composed ‘for it ke Herbert | ‘East of Fifth Avenue’ Is Thrilling, Dramatic Life in a boarding house immediate- ly presents situations fraught with dramatic possibilities. Each tenant is a story by himself—all the occupants together offer a colorful, kaleidoscopic panorama of life—joy, despair, love, hate and intrigue weave the pattern. Columbia Pictures has taken this interesting theme and produced a pic- ture—a picture which might be labeled “the ‘Grand Hotel’ of. boarding house life in New York.” It is called, “East of Fifth Avenue,” and will be showing at the Capitol Theatre, beginning to- morrow. are featured. The film marks the debut of Miss Tree, who, until this picture, was known only to legiti- mate stage audiences, having played in “Clear All Wires,” “Grand Hotel,” “Holiday,” “Street Scene,” and “Up Pops the Devil.” Miss Tree plays “Kitty Green,” a chorus girl. Wal- lace Ford, who portrays “Vic Howard,” a race-track tout, has been seen in “Three Cornered Moon,” “Goodbye Again,” and “My Woman,” three cur- rent Hollywood successes. Mary Carlisle, last seen in “Col- lege Humor,” is cast as the unfaithful wife of Wallace Ford. Walter Con- FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS fo aS THE NEWFANGLES (Mom’n Pop) ONL NESS WHO COULD APPEAR AGAINST Ae HE STOLEN PEARLS = ag $ PRERING CHART (CAN GET Y WITH RIM 1 P. THEY WON'T HAVE A SHRED oF ARS WITH HIM GONE, | CAN se START= : Y CAPTAIN= THAT MAN (AUST. io oe TO any vat Aner JUST THE OTHER DAY HE DROPPED ABRICK FROM THE TOP OF A TALL BUILDING AND | BARELY ESCAPED MIGHTY SORRY, MR. GUMP- BUT THERE'S NO REPORT TO MAKE. = THAT CROOK, ZANDER, 18 STILL AT LARGE- HE'S A SLICK CUSTOMER-. USING’ THE OL’ HEAD! FA NoPE! WE GOTTA 8 ({ OL WRONG-WAY ) | THAT Guy GETS oleae (very tine] | FRECKLES" IN My HAIR, WANE TonTLL KEEP TEAM SPIRIT ) RISHT..WE FAMOUS PITT COAGH CRASH GETS || WnAy, Tawa, | FRECKLES...1 Do IT MYSELF! AN HARMONY UP. ea TIES, TIE dogma wre een "Leet hy ’ A CHANCE i ee FEEL LIKE HE CAN'T ID FOR THE KINGSTON 4 left hand know what thy right hand doeth.’ me ve ries ||AAMANA ARAN RY yah ME LIKE THAT GAME =TLL JUST With that asa moto the underkand lineman - " 2s i\\ on GRIN AN BEAR vents all sorts of tricks to fool the referee. Sa eS ene The defensve hneman has many opportunt ABOUT HIS thes to try such dirty work. and one of his pet REVERSE RUN ried 1s illustrated m the accompanying iat ‘As far as the right arm x concerned, the de- ‘ PRINGLE fensive lineman 1s making a legal play Its being £ GAME... tured as a means of lifting the opponent legally — a but the left hand is about to be used illegally m iy 87S GETTING striking across the opponent's face to help UNDER straighten i vp, throw him off balance. and make a hole. eae ‘About the only defense the opponent has oN agamst this type of plaver 1 to charge low and keep the head down, . r By COWAN HE'S GITTIN' CLOSER. USTEN TO HiM “IPE! HE'LL CORNER THEM CROOKS ANY MINUTE, Now} _—<— THERE'S NUTHIN' TEAR, ONCT MY HOUND GITS ON THE TRAIL OF THEM CROOKS!HE'LL SOON RUN EM T'EARTH 1 Dorothy Tree and Wallace Ford SWELL, MURPH! IN EAcl SO Good I'VE TAKEN ON © NEW BARBER — MEET san Howdy! (WELL, Hack, Ye ou cuT-uP, [How's Te’ GaRGER BIZNESs: b © MERSE They’ ours! By MARTIN | Grano, HONEY | DIS REA SHO AM 1, || A WRAMDOOZIE OF A PARTY Yo’s dow’, || Yossi’ Fo Mise GWENDOWNN -.- OPAL ? ee IWDEEDVS HowM FIX! tr 50 Wi Fit! We A LIME LARGE FOR WHAT'S MORE, THIS LAKE BECAUSE THERE'S-A FOOT GET ORF THIS CLAIM AN: WAL, YOU CAN'T STAKE NO CLAIM SL IGN'T OUR CLAIM LEGAL?/ ACROST A NAVIGABLE RIVER, aN He STAN'S T'REASON You CANTT| \T ON NO NAVIGABLE LAKE, ALLEY OOP “THERE THERE, KINGS YOU'LL BE OKAY INA JIFFY! nolly, who in his short screen life, has built up a reputation as one of film- dom’s finest delineator’s of character roles, plays the old English owner of the boarding house wherein the action takes place. Other interesting occupants of the boarding house are played by Walter Byron, Louise Carter, Lucien Little- saney ‘Willard Robertson and Fern Em- pc ' Argyria is peculiar disease which medicines ang silver salts bring it on. persons in this country are in writing as a means of livelthood. . ¥ Nearly 50 totally or partially blind engaged