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NATIONAL—*Ca o AVALCADE,” produced by Fox Films, and opening at National .Theater to- {1 m d it an or ary c- :nd thomndl of extras Scores of Clive Brook, ‘The world was scoured for the proper players to enact the leading roles, several hundred tests of women being made, for instance, before the choice flnllly centered upon \ the lovely Diana as Jane | Marryot. Clive Brmk ‘was selected for Robert A casting director was sent from ywood to London to in- | terview several memben of the original | cast and, when the drama ended fits hlx successful year's run, was able to sign Una O'Connor, Merle Tottel ham and lrene Browne to play the roles they created on the stage. He also signed Ursula Jeans, musical comedy favorite, for thy role of Fanny Brid, and Frank Lawton for that of Marryot. All other parts were cast in the film capital and include such prominent players as Herbert Mundin. Mercer, Frank Warburton, undny Tempe Piggott and Beryle | dom. rg‘ret IIAI.'N)—"“n. Big Cage” FORTY llmmnnd tigers, flerce and mfin; hel -nhl.n a circus cage under the pping hip of a daring trainer—here Cage,” Ul vhlehhphyln:qthemnw'l’hel Anita Page, of *Broadway Melody” fame, enacts the mading role under the direction o! x Neumann, and in the sup e Clyde Beatty, Andy Devine, , Wallace Ford, Raymond_ Hatton, Reginald Barlow, ‘Wilfred Lucas, Robert McWade and James Durkin. The animals, who are stars of “The Big Ci " in thelr own &fle right, are resl c! performers; all came from the Hagenback-Wal- lace outfit and the Hagenback-Wallace | 200—sf officials worked with Umvaual to estab- lish an suthentic background for the picture. To complete its new the Rialto offers Graham McNamee as the talking in connection with the showing of the new Universal News. COLUMBIA- SALLY ZILERS and Ralph Bellamy are carrying the leading roles in the Fox film production, “Second-Hand Wife,” which ends it engagement at Loew's Columbia Theater this evening. “Luxury Liner,” a film which relates the drama in the lives of the passengers sboard a magnificent ocean liner dur- ing the six days of its voyage from Eu- rope to America, will open tomorrow. George Brent, Zita Johann, Vivienne Osborne, Alice White, Verre Teasdale, C. Aubrey Smith and Frank Mo head the “passenger list” in the film. Brent is cast as a physician who secures himself the position of ship’s doctor for the voyage so that he may attempt to effect a reconciliation with his wife, Miss Osborne, who has eloped with an- other man. Miss Johann plays the role of a nurse, his assistant, whose kind- ness helps him forget his own troubles when he is u!]ed time after time, to administer to uun; patients. LOEW'S FOX—"“The Crime of the Century.” | w ILLIAM MORRIS is presenting the | xrrefresnble funny man of the stage, radio and screen, Eddie Cantor, in persor in a new vaudeville revue at Loew's Fox Theater week. in the Cantor show are | Benny Meroff and His Orchestrs, a group of gifted musicians mcludlng in its personnel singers, dancers and comedy men, Holland & Knight, the Four Abbottiers and Bobby Bixley. “The Crime of the Century” the Pic: | special overture by the Earle Orchestra am, | there. feature film attraction on the do:’nn‘: mystery drama e &rz’n‘emarder. with the cflmg confessed before its actuai-commission, has in cast Jean Hersholt, Wynne Glhlon Stuart Erwin and Frances Dee in the Id!ni‘nl- Gordon Westcott and David dau have principal supporting Toles, w FMT ‘WORKERS,” Metro-Goldwyn~ Mayer's production, featuring John Oflbem Mae Clark, Robert Arm- strong, Muriel Kirkland and Virginia Carroll, is now playing at Loew's Pal- ace. The film concerns two men who believe themselves to be love-proof. John Gilbert has appeared in many successful screen hits, some of which PALACE—"Fast Workers.” Usher and others in the suj c EARLE—“From Hell to Heaven.” BlN BERNIE, with “All the Lads"” headlines the Earle stage bill this | week. “The Old Maestro” and the boys mhurdmwmuu-oflmmwy lynooplud tunes, comedy and clever dancing. On the screen is Paramount'’s newest drama, “From Hell to Heaven,” | with Carole Lombard, Jack Oakie, David | Manners and Adrienne Ames in the featured roles. This is a screen drama which peers into the intimate thoughts and secret lives of a group of people who make up one 1l section of a crowd of thousands. Eleven characters | . move through the action of “From Hell | to Heaven,” each gambling for a lucky brenl to_win honor, life, love or free- The cast also includes Sidney Blackmer, Shirley Grey, Bradley Page, mr Walker, Rita LeRoy and many Other acts on the stage bill are Violet Carlson, caricature prima donna star of “Student Prince,” “Sweet Adeline,” and “The Red Robe”; the three Victor oxru 3 nnvrlw aerial dance st and mistress of ceremonies. ornhnn mclnmee newsreel and o complete the program. METROPOLITAN—“42nd Street.” DU! to a last-minute change in book- ings, Warner Bros.' musical spec- tacle, “‘:an' m" :hlch m}O{hl: seven days of ty business at Earle Theater, has been moved to War- ner Bros.” Metropouun ‘Theater, where it will be shown until Thursday night. Gorgeous girls,—to the number of about directors, singers, song wflun. hoofers, crooners, comics, heav- les, juveniles and ingenues—they're all . And Warner Baxter, Bebe Dan- iels, George Brent, Una Merkel, Ruby Nea ‘Sparks, Dick Pewel Roy Ginger Rog- ers, Allen Jenkins, Henry B. Walthall, Edward J. Nugent, Harry Akst and a dozen others are featured in the cast. Special short reel subjects and the Paramount sound news complete the program. R-K-O KEITH'S—"So This Is Africa!” PATRON! of R-K-O Keith's are so- ing in Africa this week, with Roben Woolsey and Bert Wheeler in a picture called “So This Is Africa!” ‘What happens to Wheeler and Woolsey on this journey of “exploration” is ac- tually nobody's business. find whole tribes of wild women, led by a Tarzana played by Raquel Torres. They find that Mrs. Johnson-Martini, engaged as a wild animal expert, is actually frightened every time a lion a mile away roars. These are but two of the things that happen, and Wheeler and ‘Woolsey fans, numbering a legion, won't need any further information on the pictyre. The piece is chuck full of musical numbers, has some 300 of Hollywood's predfiedt mu and was built for laughing mu only. GAYETY— "Powder Puff” Revue. ¢ DOWDER PUFF" Revue comes to the Gayety, starting with the usual matinee today. The roster of the revue includes Hazel Miller, statuesque blond; Eddie Kaplin, Harry Arnie and Eddie Dale, three comedians; Johanna Slade and Mae Baxter, ingenue beauties; Joan Dare, Bob Birch and Bert Grant, Pred Bishop, Mlle. Marie, and Ray, Realy and Roy, Argentine and Mexican dancers. Matinees will be given daily. “Cavalcade’s” Music ORE than 200 persons were en- gaged by the Fox Film Cor- poration to aid in the com- position and synchronization of the musical score of “Cavalcade,” the film version of Noel Coward’s famous play, opening tomor- row evening at the National Theater. The research on the music alone al- most eq'\nlled that on the production gener! From the start each piece, uonlyn le bar or note, had to be ocleared X y. And when the pro- duction department announced that more than 50 compositions were to be in- cluded as musical background the legal department at Fox set the machinery in momm t.a gain rights to the re- quired musi ‘This work ‘became especially difficult because some of the pisces were literally in the discard and the orchestrations and original data had to be traced thrmh many offices, files and mem- e, o hght s Semainca. 1or the ht to it rem; or the staff at l"ox'h(cmelune City, headed by Louis de Francesco, to arran, e n o suit the special requirements o8t every imaginable type of music was incorporated in the flm. from Strauss waltzes and ex- through “Oh You Beautiful Doll” and on throu[h Noel Coward's #Twentieth Century Blues,” the music covers the period from 1899 to the pres- ent and on into the imaginary music of the future. Such old-fuhloned hits, once here and abroad, “Good Bye Dolly Gray,” “Bird in a Dullded Ct!e.” and “Oh You Beautiful Doll” are included. The is covered by “Madelon,” “Mademoiselle from Armentieres, “Yankee Doodle,” “Soldiers of the Queen,” “When Johnny Comes March- ing Home,” King and Country Need Y%‘M = French by [ 540! e are Prel songs sung Poflus in the trenches; “Aupres de Ma Blonde” and “Les Trios Capitaines,” while the ditties Jovgullr in England during the past “Take Me Back to Yorkxhxrz" lnd “lI Do Like to be by the Seaside.” Noel Coward composed Century Blues,” modern times, specially for his He also composed “Lover of " | Dreams,” an old-fashioned waltz fonm one of the earlier sequences. A Eulece symphony orchestra, wn recruif and rehearsed. A mammoth pipe organ is heard throughout the |group of brilliant young picture and a chorus of 50 voices adds | Broadway stage before taking up Thirty-five com- | picture career. to Lhe arrangement. the work into s suit- me vhole and wrote the additional |bound” sand “Rebound.” music for the interludes, end. Their First Dollars. TRST dollars, like first loves, are soon spent, but not quickly for- gotten, says Author Val Lewton. A Hollywood poll on the question as to what the cinema players with their first doliars brought responses. ‘gilnu, who had intimate of momey matters when he broker before becoming & first dollar at did forth amus e s bond the heart. The womean who lived next door to his family in Virginia owned & cow. Haines secured the job of delivering milk to this woman’s few customers, saved his pennies until he had s dollar and then spent his entire urnlvn to buy an ornate box of candy 28 & Valentine for the daughter of the vuun who owned the cow. nt my first dollar on & woman,” ines, “but it's very nroblbln rn md my last on & Phyffe ¢ hobby is the collection of an nflm of he on the Nile; iy ST E Bl S & fellow stu con- = tract between the two stipulated that l.f the boy he coached did not pass the . examinations, Ramon Navarro was not to collect his fee. By a miracle, the student passed his examination, and dollar in hand, Navarro went off to buy & tie he had admired in a local haber- 'd like to have that tie now,” No- varro says. “Even in Hollywood where ties have not yet learned to keep silence, that tie I bought as a boy would have been a nine days wonder. It was purple, green and magenta. It Xflrly bellowed Jimmy Durante, the com: the nose, earned his nnt dolhr bnuh- ing the clothes of the customsrs in his father’s barber shop on the East Side of New York. He zpent this dollar on 10, dlme novels. d was I mortified,” says Durante, “when I found all them novels had dif- 1erent heroes and villains but the same Was I mortified?” oma Garbo is known to have earned her first Swedish valent of a dollar as an apprentice sales nrl in the Berg- storn ent Stockholm. mre is no r;uegrd ot whlt she did "l::h money, one Hollywood wag sists that she still has it. HOME COOKED FOODS Chicken Box, $1 Conatating of whole tried chick- , baked Idaho potstoes. cel- ru'-kl , (unr fruit nm And six hol lmn 10 AM. to| The Spinning 12000 16th St. N.W. SPECIAL LUNCHEON, J.le A Aoy i ae Ten Hoom Wheel Ina North the mmuomnl T | Victor mlperm is directing. “Twentleth | Domld Cook yesterday was placed under a¢ commentary on| |'a long = | Public Enemy,” “Private Jones,” “Frisco ¢ BOR!S KARLOFF, Universal's famous WEEK OF MARCH 12, Academy ““Too Busy Wil mn .m "Mlh P‘ » TRddie € lc.nm n “The Kid From Bpais Ambassador l_!fl‘l.m Rd. Apollo 034 X Bt. NB. Hyattaville, Md. Ashton Clarendon, Va. Dark. Siark Gavje Avalon "Nuusw ownr N HIS Conn. Ave. Ave. Grand ’fi'f‘me £ Ed 2 645 Pa. Ave. B.E. 2108 Pa. Ave. N.W. olony 7 in 1 B Os. Ave. & Tarnaeut_yon.” uuulr’o?'-'r'-fi'r't Yen. Dumbarton fsiiss ot ndolph Seoft in 1349 Wis. Ave. N.W, ol ametly: - Fairlawg “;“"' T Anacostia, D. C. Hippodrome %"t it Bette '” ‘ 8L NW. 520:000 Yea Sing Sing."”_Comedy. News. Hellg, Ever fl_ % tta Tm and EE%W'_ ico White in N s iraned.” u.ll " rt Edmund Lowe and Victor McLaglen, in “Hot Pepper.” Ruth Ettine short 13th & O Sts. N.EB. ewman tray Richard :§tx and Ann H oThe | cm\qu.ml . -Jeue 18thor.RIAve.N.E. Lyric Galthersburs, Del Ray, Va. 3030 14th 8t. N Seco Stiver Spring, Md. Brow! 6th & C Bts. NE. “Laughter in Bethesds, Md. Sylvan 104 R. I Ave. N.W. Takoma Takoma Park, D. C. Tivoh 14th & Park Rd. Jx;ln Ruth Chatferton, n lug& Chatterton, o denny. cm.oéx'x 1 of the Prench Pnllu 22 Janet Ga; Charles Tim MeCoy 1 Y8 MeCoy n n Bio a rmu uaoluucu Il -rren T By MascDonald x-un ll.omr 53 Illm-AlItn come: Jack Oakie lnd to Loew's Columbia Theater. ' en‘andex of the neath nu le- W 4 an nmgmn - flgnfi m. 11. “Shado oxlmun Boris Karloff in Tom “The Mummy." “Come On, Dll'lll‘:l." s ‘E"'Mé' n L “The - Madame Buttert “The Pares } :xnufln‘a g::laonr of }mmu Ho?muhndn Gartoon. Lecle 5o Cir 1o BRiTior Homes) bsHolmes adume Blanche edy._Cartoon. B RD eyenne g Patty Arbuckle Bdmun in D!v X Frm. Mo rf:‘mm; mu —Tr TE0D %nn%n i den e BV 1an:m. Town " cCor, in Be 'y Variety. TN MRS e C‘l carole 4in 1t own." Ga. Ave. & Quebec. pagar Bergen co o Paramount News. CAE‘I GRANT gets the coveted role of the Hawk in “The Eagle and the Hawk.” Others in the cast of this air story by John Monk Ssunders are Frederic March, Jack Oskle and Sir Guy Standing. Stuart Walker is to e rioos 1o ley - in actress, o] the Four Marx Brothers’ picture “Cracked Ice.” directing. e e Dorot! “l Love Thl‘:r'lde:n." the new Charles | Rogers-Paramount Jproggomm'n :;- b, lery joe o ml S ' rt Armstrong, Walter W:lker, xdmunfl ln'e and Nancy Car- roll also are in the cast. Completely "c‘""u'.‘ln'i';”‘c an at- tack of influenza, w! D! hu Lyman ‘Taylor in “Snpernltunl e ltl’ Carole Lombard, Owrn Burr Mac- Annan, Ru:dolph Scott, Allan Dine- hart, H. B. Warner and Beryt Mercer. Richard Bennett again has with- | drawn from u\ewu:‘t lol cznh: “mmol Songs.” Henry West is a nical director for this film starring | Marlene Dietrich. | Dorris Malloy has been uin\ed as a meémber of Paramount’s writing she is_adapting Grace Perkins' ., “Mike,” to the screen. Donald Cook's Break. As the result of his excellent work “The Circus Queen Murder,” -term contract by Columbia Pic- cum to appear in romantic leads. His first mlznment will be the second lead “Tampico,” the picturization of Jo- seph Hergesheimer's widely read novel, ‘which Jack Holt is starred. Donald Cook was considered one of the s His New York c ances included “Pavis mmd," : screen debut in 1930 in “ .’ ’nwn followed featured roles in “The Jenny,” “Penguin Pool Murd ‘Trial of Vivienne Ware” and “Safe in Hell.” His last appearance was in “Baby Face.” Kll‘lflg Off to London. xponenr. of the unusual and m~ tesque characters, is speeding to Bnlllnd by plane, ste: and train to start work in & new Gaumont-Brit- l&h producdon, which will be started ediately on his arrival. Karloff left oflllomh by plane Thursday, March 2, and salled from New York Saturday on the steamship Paris. Karlof’s Gaumont-British production is titled “The Ghoul,” & story that is said to provide the most extraordinary a:k-mnrtnunn he has ever under- en. 210 4.20-6:30-8: 45 “THE OL MAESTRO' BEN BERNIE and all phe Lads ...u.wou LOMBARD T Hamblé offer a setting wl B an of Hor Owh." Washington’s Players What Various Dramatic Organizations Are Doing and Propose to Do. imy An! Kt Kingdom. r Bergen comedy. Edgar Bergen comedy. Abe Lyman short sub. Abe Lyman short sub. “MIDDLE WATCH” THURSDAY. 'HE Drama Guild of Washington will present “The Middle Watch” | Wardman Park Theater on Thursday and Friday evenings. For its third pro- duction of the season the guild bas selected this farcical romance of the by | day, April 3 and 4, at 8 o'clock by the| Drama Study League under the direc- | i .| tion of Arthur Bradley White, assisted at of regulations, hlfle the girls in & room. Bethine Coe. hoping against hope that they will not be discovered. The admiral of the fleet suddenly on spending the ensues when the ship intent ds ht there. What the high officers find the women on board provides an une: su ‘of amusing comedy. Foote as the ton and !:me e admiral. Pn’{;he cast includes Bethine Coe and Banford as the chaperon, and Maurice Jarvis as_ th cast are Maude Howell Smith, Thomas Cahill, Marvin Beers, Jose| Wilma Wright, Howard nore Ramney, Harold Weinberger, Brad Holmes and Herbert Eby. sted will The , technical two girls, Allene Others_in the h O'Donnell, itfleld, Le- Robert Hal- under 1 Wheel'rl(ht hich will be a repro- duction of mess rooms and cabins -on board a man-o’-war. PIERCE HALL PLAYERS. Vane, which of . NOW rve P PICTURE AGRIPPING “OU’!‘WAED-BOUN‘D by Sutton the Pierce Hall Players will present on the evenings of March 23 and 24, will mark Paul Alex- ander's debut as s director. He will also y the part of Henry, which he played the production of the play last ynr by the Arts Club. been assembled, including ran, who studied at Academy in New Yorx; Myrtle Mac- Mahon, well known for her m‘nnlty Charles A. Bel), Richard Harr, Olga Helms and Col. Edmond Sayre. Prank cast has dred Cur- e American A stron her dramatic Downey, formerly of ll’lillltley Pla} yers; £R wmu, 1S HERE ] STORY OF THE LIVES AND LWES OF CIRCUS ad ANITA PAGE qfl'%:- Site!™ mmbloyes Bhirat edy com. LautelHardy comed. Stpy. Raerin e Ken Innurd n ._tween PFighti Men’ Tt Armst ion.} nou.{"'iw‘:’ im MeCo: retta Young and Alice White in 3 Patty Arbuckle comedy. ance.” Jameson has been invited to play the part of Mr. Lingley. DRAMA STUDY LEAGUE: LENTEN drama, “On the Third Day,” will be presented at Ward- man Park Theater Monday and Tues- by James O. Connell and Francis Mc- Even an Art Room. A COMPLETE newspaper office, with automatic telegraphs, copy-desk, and even an art room, was ¥epreduced ¢4 & Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer sound stage, an exact replies of one in Chi- ‘Wires.” u.c'r:’ for “Clear ied in detail from actual photo- at least, the actual workers there. Guy Usher, veteran stage actor, who fl,""‘ McFarren recently in “Whistling the Dark,” was chosen to play t.he publisher. Charles Crockette is editor, Ferrls Taylor, stage actor, tha assistant editor, and Wilbur Mack, va+ riety star, plays the debonair and flip- pant cartoonist. Charles Giblyn, vet- eran director and character actor, plays the head of the copy-desk. June Knight Signed. 'Dfll Kflz“’.mfil‘, described by the late a3 one of ::ufiml . : of '.lu most erican nu. and now dndnc hit “Take a C‘;I‘lnt‘. t I v term ocontract -.3 v 'fll Laemmle, jr., of Unlnf-l A nlun Californian, Miss Knight was brou; hc ';‘oo New t(’):tk, l.ilt uunv xl: m‘mzre stell nors upe Velex il lfl' “Hot Cha.” S8he will bnln‘ n‘:’emm work at Universal City at the conclu- donLo! the “Take a Chance” engage- ‘men! PINOCCIIIO Seats Now 5, 8551 .5 SR it A Play for Children. HEN Italian “Pinocchio” comes to town with the Children's Theater ©o. of New York, on Saturday morning, March 18, st the National Theater, every boy and girl in Washington will ize & friend in this lovely marion- ette, whose adventures have provided :fim.mem for tth-ndl of children d. school and home for more nlluflnc:.:x tures. Good spirits watch over hio, however, and after many many other' fanciful characters meet Pinocchio as he travels through life, umm each he learns a lesson in Clare Tree lll]au production of “Pinoecchio” will to Wllhllll!:n‘ the delightful m«fy of this most popular n! all Italian fairy tales. Brooke Students to Act. curmn.b BROOKE announces that the first-term nuaenu 0! his Academy of Stage Training and Dra- matic Arts will be seen in a perform- ance at the National Theater at 8:30 o'clock on Sunday night, April 2. The performance will include scenes from “As You Like It” “The School for BScandal” and “The Charm School.” All of the 101 students at the academy will uke take part in the per!ommce 'COMPLETE DINNER | OR the week commencing Friday, Warner Bros. = Metropolitan | ral Theater announces Cecil B.' De pknv.lm and the Mark Twain of natu- history, because, by combining uu vicissitudes of travel, the customs of the le and the m'.ln -mnnuml’unnm. March, E11s Land]i Charles Laughton and Claudette Colbert and consists Claudette Colbert. le!}nm ey o;nmei'llbollelecuon g the pre p short reel mb’bet.l which include Lh: latest issue Paramount Sound News. CONBTANCI BENNETT in Somerset Maughan's “Our Betters” is to be the next attraction at R-K-O Keith's, starting next Priday. This latest of the Bennett productions has an excellent cast of stage and lcreenKhym in- clucln: Miner Watson, wel ‘ashington; Violet - Kemble - Cooper. Onm Mitchell, Phoebe Foster, Anita Louise and Gilbert Roland. The pic- ture, directed hy George Cukor, is & ARVETH WELLS, explorer and writer, who talks in “The Jungle Killer,” comes on Monday, March Mr. Wells has been called the Will Rogers of ex- | ¢ | ture version of 0, | ternational renown. “Fox.ww THROUGH,” the rellick- "THE WHITE BSISTER,” muo- Goldwyn-! Ml)’!l"l new talking pis F. Marion Cri romance, is coming soon ace Theater, 1 on the screen in the classic love story, and a prominent mypomau‘" fea- tures Lewis Stone, Louise Hale, Msy Robson, Edward Arnold and Alan ;Jde;:i;d" under the direction of Victor 8. WARN‘III BROS.’ Earle Theater for the week commencing Friday will resent the Paramount drama “King of Jungle” as the screen feature, and a stage show headed by Ray Bolger, dancing marvel; Long Tack Sam and other acts. The film tells the story of Kaspa, the lion man, who has grown uj in his jungle, happy with his lion frien and knowing n of the outside world until he and four of his lions are captured and shipped to America to be- come part of a circus. The role of the lion man is played by a newcomer, Bus- ter Crabbe, swimming champion of in- The cast 2lso in- cludes Frances Dee, Nydia Westman, Sidney Tolder, Irving Pichel and others. Wild Animal Trainer 'lu tellect and will, which even the mm Animals 45 pounds—a % young man of 27 years, with a brilliant smile and curly brown hair. He looks like & bond galesman, or & “snappy” clerk in a store, And yet for the past two years Beatty has been the premier sitraction of the circus worldi—s man who has ac- complished each day a feat which has never be{:u beenm h:l‘umpudbl : er. assem e o 43 w be lions and , combining not only theu two deadly natural ene- mies, but both sexes of each species. Men grown old in this most dangerous of professions have looked on in amaze- ment. “When I first took |gah e training | of wild animals,” said tty recently, “I was simply fascinated by my wor I had trained cats and dc ster at home, and m 1920, lt. tl e ue of 15, I ran away to join Howe's Great | London Show. year and a half later I had perfected an act with animals, and 'l‘ad the Gmfichmgl clrcu: I nted a group w cluded two | mrfl two tigers and several lions. | “This gave me s start and whetted my enthusiasm for what was to follow, Com. | E o during the following Winter, in training quarters in Peru, Ind., I was rather severely clawed by a lion. This, however, was merely the first of my | 25 tripd to the hospital. The'animal trainer comes to accept these mishaps | as a necessary part of his profession, and if they cause him to lose his nerve, there is nothing to doé but adopt scme other . My longest hospital | trip was occasioned by a lion bite which | penetrated to the bone of my thigh. It resulted in the only case of true jungle fever known to American medicine. “My sole defense in the arena is a whip which I snap to concentrate the wavering attention of the animals; a re- | volver loaded with ‘blanks’ which I use | for the same purpose, and an ordinary kitchen chair. There are no loaded | uns either inside or outside the arena, or If an attendant would shoot an animal which might attack me, it would simply madden it to uncontrollable fury CHANGE OF POLICY STARTING THIS SUNDAY | MATINEE MARCH | NEW ROAD SHOWS | WITH_NEW CHORUS AND PRINCIPALS EVERY WEEK and greatly lessen my chances of escap- ing alive. “The trainer’s main is in- savage of animals respect. naturally fearful of man, and if !ha trainer can completely overcome his own sense of fear, he has a tremendous ad- vantage over the dumb brutes. They must never be allowed for an instant to lose sight of the fact that man is their master.” Clyde Beluy is making his rance on ‘age,” now flnm.c{eme R';iw. Fourth Panther Woman. ‘,mA HILLIE is the fourth panther woman to win a Paramount con- tract. Upon completion of her first feature , the feminine lead in Zane Grey’s “Under the Tonto Rim, Hillle, Detroit's entrant in contest, signed a long-term agreement | with the studio. Kathleen Burke. who won the Panther Woman role in “Island of Lost Souls” and Lona Andre and Gail Patrick, runners-up already had won_their contracts. PADEREWSKI uulmuu Hall, 'ul. m. l.-r 22, 4:30 Boy Wonder of the Vielin. Constitation Hall, Sat. Eve., Mar. 25, 8:30 LILY PONS World's Greatest Coloraturs Seprane Constitution Hall, Fri. Aft., Mar. 31, 4:30 first ap- Big ACADEMY = Continuous From. Z”?.'e‘.‘,’ ,"""' RON/ (‘ZOLI{:AP; KAY PRAN WILL HOGE'HB in_“TOO_BUSY TO WORK." VA. 111h & N. C. Ave. S.E BU KEATON in 2105 Pa. Ave., Fhers, Sk, Ban NI A D0 o AR D—umN e A _BODY."_Co BOBTO T Bomedy. " Sla | Songs fer New. FAlRLAWN ’"'"‘“"“ Aty in '20.0600_YEARS 0 !!NG i ' NATIONAL smpunm | REQUEST PROGRAM Today—4 P.M. FRANK GITTELSON, Soloist Meistersinger, Wa n ! r ; Uhflnllh!d Symp Schubert Concenn. BY\Ieh Movement Pathetique hon]y, TChlkkD\'ll!. POPULAR PRICES 50c—75c—$1.00—$1.50 Box Office in Constitutior. Hall Open at Me. 3861 ¢ %" Eopet, Manager FI_NAL SUNDMONCERT First Stage Show at 2:10 2nd Sym- Bolero. [50c Scientifically Balanced Meals ' Club Breakfast Luncheon 18c to 28c 20c to 35¢ NATURAL FOOD CAFES 1412 1448 New York Ave. New York Ave. Ot cimply s FOX FILM Presents < WML BOCHNEL ¢ okt Sclogram NOEL COWARD’S PICTURE OF.THE GENERATION “FINEST PHOTOPLAY RESERVED INCLUDING TAX NATIONAL COMN TOMORROW IGNT 2:80—TWICE DAILY THEREAFTER—8:80 WDEVILII REVUE Sereen. - 'fln(llmEoP J(‘Hu” WY""EGII 0“ | LYRIC mmulsmlu. Monday—PENGUIN_POOL MURDER." . N.E 600 PRINCESS Double Feature (Mat. HAINES in “FAST in_“NIGHT AFTER STANTON Tomorrow—RUTH CHATTERTON CO JENNY.” Com. News. TAKOMA “'2, 28, Britarast st Phone (‘LORGI'\ 4312 ROBIN: EDW. SON 1 “SILVER DOLLAR” HIPPODROME ~&%..%5%5. 5% SPENCER TRACY 20,000 YEARS IN SING SING” CAME( MI. RAINIER, D, VICTOR McLAGLEN— “HOT PEPPER” TTSVILLE. ND. ARCADE s S T« ALEXANDRIA. VA, RICHMOND * ,..,o,*"',,.'.‘m....[_ tore. “Grand Hetel ADE ;oo‘:;‘lm:x,: Tune Velez. “Hot Pe) BY!o. T ASSADO| v Col. “STATE_FAIR." With Eic 'E 624 H 8t NE. EDDIE CAl " RLE mN;l"on. "KID FROM SPAIN.' AVALON .. 5 e DIRECTION OF SIDNEY LUST AT JAMES CAGNEY, ~HARD " With MARY BRIAN. Bo Oih 8L Bet, D v “STATE TRO §z§ LOWE. VICTOR McLAGLEN, PADPER . BRort AT EDMUND 14th 8t & Col Rd. SA “LAUGHTER IN HELL” TIVOLI *& o3 ER BROS. THEATERS