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= A6 “Melody Cruise” Is Light And Fluffy Entertainment Musical Picture Entirely Suitable for Summer Weather—Mystery G Fox This Week—The Stage Programs. By E. de ¢ ELODY CRUISE” R-K-O ¢ Keith's current contribution to film musicalianna, is a pleasant little Summer rec- reation, nicely filmed, poor- 1y acted, but funny enough to be more than averagely enjoyed. This is due to Charlie Ruggles and to Director Mark Sandrich, who has filmed the proceed- ings with original- ity and verve, and to the fact that Marjorie Gateson, veteran actress, walks in at the cnd of the picture sad shows the oth-rs how to behave. Mr. Ruggles' whimsies, the syn- chronization of the music and the way | one scene fades into another are suffi- cient to nake you overlook the trivial- ity of the subject Charles Ruggles. | and the workings | of the hero and heroine, who, appar- ently, have lent but a small ear to the acting musie. Phil Harris, popular and overcurled jazz maestro from the West, | is the hero and Helen Mack 'pretty}’ profile, but otherwise stiff) is the lady | who succumbs to his wiles—whatever | they may be. | Tt all takes place—most of it, that is— | on a voyage from here to there, during which Charlie Ruggles is saddled with two young ladies—well built—whom he | eventually refers to as ‘“nieces.” The | trials and tribulations he runs into on this Panama-California jaunt arc fairly | amusing, and, but for those so''py mo- ments which Maestro Harris has first | with Greta Nissen (not one of our fa-| vorites) and subsequently with Miss | Mack, all would be rather better than, well. "" The film makes no pretensions of be- dng anything more than hot-weather entertainment, plus some fancy scenes, and a skating ballet sequence for which there is about as much reason as there is for the “Forgotten Man” sequence in “Gold Diggers.” However, it is ex- | pensively done—the film has a nice tune, photography that moves it beyond the average class and a newcomer by | the name of Chick Chandler shows | untroubled waters, go boom in a great, | | viewing this picture, and enjoying some |of it, we were faced with a predicament MUSEMENTS. irl in Film at Loew's S. Melcher. clouds make, you are apt to be (as we were) on the edge of your chair. biting | your fingernails and wishing for more. | Although the management has planted too much red on this portion of the| picture, and although 'you know that| slow-motion photography has been in- | jected into the final shots you are willing to forget these faults, in the excitement of a moment, when quiet, big majestic way. Be sure not to miss | this. It is the best part of the program. * o x * 'HO is “The Girl in 419?" We ask this hopefully. After | telling a friend who the heroine really is, or was. We doubt if rou will be able to find out. She is, however, so passively beautiful, so fair and golden and whatnot, that you prob- ably will not care. The current Jimmie Dunn-Gloria Stuart film at Loew's Fox. is otherwise quite understandable, being a some- times violent little account of a girl who springs out of nowhere and finds herself half dead in a private room of an emergency hospital. ‘There, for- tunately, she comes into the “ken” of a doctor (Mr. Dunn), who loses all| thought of the world and its sorrows at sight of her. Tossing other patlents (not literally) to the winds, he takes care of her night and day, wards off gangster “sweethearts” of hers, and marries her when the golden-fingered dawn seems imminent. A nicely acted little picture, with a heroine who is perhaps a trifle too| silent, it is moderately entertaining and | includes in its cast the dour Paul La Rue and William Harrigan, who, if we remember right. played the lead in O'Neill's “The Great God Brown” away back in the days before the play had moved up to Broadway. * k% % THE Fox stage show starts off this week with two attractive young ladies from the South, Cherry and June Preisser, who do the sort of acrobatic dances that first won them their local —namely. | | THE EVENING STAR N, TRAGIC STORY IN STANWYCK SCREEN PLAY Striking Feature in “Baby Face” Is Shown. NLY the actress who is sure of her own grasp of the public imagina- | tion would willingly undertake a role of the flinty character that is presented | of Barbara Stanwyck in “Baby Face.”| on the screen at the Earle Theater. !t‘ is because this star has been favored | with strong approval in circumstances | that created the inspiration that is; the stuff on which the acting profes-, sion depends for its advancement, that she here undertakes the perfect pic-| ture of the woman who creates havoc in the minds of men of affairs who fall under her influence. Some of the | sensational affairs in which she is the | chief figure are accidents, but on the| whole she represents a master mind in the art of attraction. Two trage- dies and a near-tragedy are on the| record, and when the man who has enriched her to the extent of half a million dollars face: disaster, and needs the money to save him from disgrace. she ignores all wifefly instincts and | drives him from her. Only when her course is nearing its end does she re- pent and, with frantic steps. Tush to| save him. It is the commendable cli- | max that redeems the play. and gives it a dramatic finish that is as unex- pected as it is impressive. As a piece of entertainment. “Baby Face” is probably an unprecedented | exposition of the methods of the femi- | nine side of ruthless action. It is as full and clear a story of the capital- izing of what appears to be human affection as stage or screen has ever presented. Miss Stanwyck's place the scheme is established with mar: velous conception of motives and of craft and power to deceive.. From the theatrical standpoint, it is one of the achievements of her career and, with- out considering the moral side, it is worthy of a place among the conspicu- ous things that have been done. It is possible for the moralist to say that its chief point is that the human mind must eventually respond to the higher motive, no matter how long that change has been delayed; that affec- tion and loyalty and justice must be vindicated. There is no doubt that the resulting repentance is made more vivid and pleasing by contrast with the preceding events, and if the au- spurs last season at the Earle. The Misses Preisser are better than ever— which is to say that they are graceful, agile, multi-jointed and efficient. Fol- | lowing them is Vic Oliver. whose act, as always, starts off slowly and then thor had that in mind, he has done his work with dramatic force. It is a play of action, with the banking business in the background, and is a striking contribution to current pro- proceeds to get away with murder and promise in jt. which * X X % “KRAKATOA," the “short,” follows “Melody Cruise,” deserves more than a fleeting word. For some reason, we thought it only hugelv in-| teresting, but vitally exciting. When those red and black flames shoot up in | the alr out of the tranquil waters which i surround Java, when you hear the cine- matic bombardment which accompanies them, and vision the extraordinary shapes which the smoke and the giant | Politics at egimentation Coming to Front as Word Descriptiv of Rooseveltian Economic Philosophy— Example of Idea BY BYRON PRICE, Associated Press. ROM an obscure corner of the dictionary politics has resur- rected a high-flown but un-| pleasant-sounding word. It is the word “regimentation” and newspaper readers will do well to make its juaintance. y Xn‘nfl.qhe sense attached to it by the Re- publicans who discovered it, “regimen- tation” means a condition where the Government controls everything, and men and women and wealth and in- dustry are assigned their respective places and told what to do just as soldiers nehnrm;mmd1 into "yme::en:;io During the campaign, & | Preslden'l Hoover repeatedly objected to any such system of Government. declaring it would smother individual initiative and close the door of free op- portunity. Now one of the most astute ublican leaders, James W. Wads- wokth, says ‘‘regimentation” appears to be actually at hand. Admit Long Step Taken. The Democrats by no means agree, | but they do not seek to minimize the | fact that a long step has been taken | t-ward bringing the whole industrial | Jife of the Nation under the hand of | the Government. | 1t is this one aspect which is clearest | when you review the Roosevelt bills passed during the special session of Congress. They tend toward Govern-| ment management, and they put a | fine point to some words spoken by Mr. Roosevelt himself a year ago when | he accepted the Democratic nomination. “We must lay hold of the fact tha economic laws are not made by nature,” | he said. “They are made by human | beings.” | These two sentences contradicted what many leading economists have taught and moet people have believed for years. 01d Concepts Discarded. They threw overboard the old con- viction that such natural forces as supply and demand, competition, and the law of survival of the fittest are omnipotent, and that all man can do is to help nature work out the ideal solution The Roosevelt theory Where and When Current Theater Attractions and Time of Showing was that the Palace—"Peg o' My Heart,” at 11:15 am, 1:20, 3:20, 5:30, 7:35 and 9:40 pm Loew's Fox- 11 am, 1:35, 4 Stage shows at 12:40, 9:05 pm Columbia. 11:30 am, 9:40 pm Metropolitan-—“Gold Diggers of 1933." at 11 am, 12:45, 2:30, 4:10, 5:55, 7:35 and 9:20 pm R-K-O Keiths—Melody Cruise,” at 11:25 am, 1:30, 3:35, 540, 7:45 and 9:55 p.m. Earle—“Baby Face” at 11:15 am 1:50, 4:25, 7:10 and 10 pm. Stage shows at 1, 3:35, 6:20 and 9:05 pm Central—"Diplomaniacs,” from am to 11 pm. Tivoll—"The Little Giant,” at 2, 4, €, 7:50 and 9:40 pm. lor—“The Devil's Brother,” Ambassad st 2, 4, 6, 7:50 and 9:40 pm. “The Girl in 419, at 7:15 and 10 pm. 3:25, 6:15 and “When Ladies Meet” at 1:35, 3:35, 5:40, 7:40 and 1 Minute Mystery Solution to CLASS DAY. (See Page A-3.) ‘There were no clocks at the time of Julius Caesar’s death, 4“4 BC. HISTORY 1S THE WITNESS OF THE TIMES—Cicera, | ingly and with & punch that is supplied, |in_great part, by Vocalist-Funnyman | aged railroads and banks and finally a an enormous hand before he is through (assisted by Margot Crangle). The bill continues with those popular radio-ites, Col. Stoopnagle and Budd, in what we thought, alas, to be only an average act, and concludes with Art Landry and his orchestra, a group of musicians who know how to entertain quietly, amus- Jules Baudec. Random in Recent Laws. big element was not nature at all, bu human management. The special ses. sion proceeded from a managed cur- rency to a managed agriculture, man- completely managed industry. ‘The critics of these policies say a | “managed economics” won't be man- | aged but will obey its own laws. It | would be as easy, they argue, to repeal the multiplication table. Compares Reduction Methods. ‘The supporters of the Roosevelt poli- cies, in turn, look on such benefits as entirely old-fashioned and discredited. “Why is it,” asked one of them re cently. “that when nature decrees crop failure, reducing the wheat sur- plus and increasing prices, every one thinks it's great; but if the same re- duction is accomplished by law, the same people hold up their hands in ‘horror?” This is the fundamental difference now developing over the Roosevelt pro- gram. The unwieldly word “regimen- tation” is not fully expressive of the principle involved, but it is made to serve the purpose for the present. Marine Corps Orders Wise, Lt. Col. Willlam C., jr. On 30| June relieved from duty as Officer in | Charge, Western Recruiting Division, San Francisco, Calif, and assigned | to duty at Headquarters Department of the Pacific, San Francisco, Cali-| fornia. Schmidt, Major Harry. On 5 July de- | tached Headquarters Marine Corps, Washington, D. C., to Office of the Assistant Paymaster, San Francisco, | Calif. Authorized to delay enroute until 1 August. Wright, Major Raymond R. Detached Office of the Assistant Paymaster, | |also a large cast, | ed by Walter “Okay” O'Keefe, one of | ductions. While Miss Stanwyck is the central figure throughout, the acting of George Brent, faithful friend of the woman. is on the highest standard, and his all-around skill and dramatic sense give much to the satisfaction that may | be derived from the play. There is including several prominent motion picture actors, who| have place in the intricate plot. Among these are Donald Cook, Arthur Hohl, | John Wayne and Henry Kolker. ‘The stage show at the Earle is head- | the comedians who are appreciated by | those who like that kind of a come- | dian. He 15 vigorously and extremely informal. One of the most delightful | features of the program is the singing of the Keller Sisters and Lynch, which at the opening performances received | enthusiastic applause. The Four Hearts, girl dancers in trousers and tap, are equal to any of the male performers in this line, and the Three Swifts do| the almost impossible in comedy club swinging. C. C. FEDERAL COURT DECLINES TO ACT IN BEER SEIZURE Three Judges Rule Lack of Juris- diction in Case Involving Trans- portation in Georgia. By the Associated Pr ATLANTA, June 24—A three-judge Pederal court yesterday ruled it did not have jurisdiction in a suit involving the seizure of truck loads of beer in Cobb County, because the seizure did not involve a sum of more than $3,000. ‘The court did not pass on the issues of the case. ‘The suit was an attempt by H. M. Rollins of Chattanooga, Tenn., and R. R. Richmire of Jacksonville, Fla, to prevent Sheriff E. M. Legg from seizing alleged interstate shipments of beer through Cobb County. ‘The truck owners asked an injunc- tion to prevent seizure of the beverage, ‘The only course left for the petition- ers is an appeal to the State Supreme Court from a ruling of a Superior Court judge who also refused to grant an in- Junction. EXPOSES NARCOTIC RING Former Shanghai Resident Leads Agents to $50,000 Cache. SAN FRANCISCO, June 24 () —Fed- eral authorities said Juda Ezra, 40, for- mer Shanghai, China, resident, confessed here yesterday to connection with an international smuggling ring and led them to a $50,000 cache of narcotics at his home. Ezra, the authorities said, voluntarily | president of the New Jersey State Build- San Francisco, Calif,, to duty as Offi- | revealed his part in smuggling the nar- | cer in Charge, Western Recruiting | cotics into the country after he had | Division. San Francisco, Calif. | appeared in court for arraignment un- SCREEN ODDITIES BY CAPT. ROSCOE FAWCETT. CAROLE LOMBARD WHERITED A SMALL FORTUNE AND SIGNED HER FIRST IMPORTANT SCREEN CONTRACT ON THE SAME DAY. ‘sammy UNDER M| Moving the mountain to Mahomet for studio techniclans. To construct setti knocked down a tugboat and transporte complete with propellers, taffrail logs, going supplies, and a section of pier als of his success as an actor but because of elaborate receptions wherever he appear the Next Best Thing,” and “Green Dice. family answering this description in Holl A SIBERIAN IN PICTURES AND ON THE RADIO, IS LISTED \N THE LOS ANGELES TELEPHONE DIR! a ship-chandler’s store and interiors of a tugboat were needed. The techniclans to the studio where it was reassembled on a sound stage. A ship-chandler’s shop, Jean Hersholt, now a naturalized American citizen, is maikng his first visit to his native Denmark in more than 20 years. pic Games Committees in the United States last year, Hersholt has been given Casting directors are perplexed in their efforts to fill an order for “Paddy, tween the ages of 5 and 8, boy or girl, with a heavy Irish brogue. “Green Dice” the director must find a girl 10 or 12 years old, a boy of 8 and a girl of 4, all to be from the same family. JUNE 24, 1933. MISS DAVIES GIVES FORCE TO ‘PEG’ FILM , D. C, SATURDAY, Famous Role Wins New Attention on Screen. MBITION to be identified with a character possessing traits that have been idealized by the public may | be seen when Marion Davies gives her best in “Peg o' My Heart." She stars | in the film, which is being shown at| the Palace Theater. Just as Laurette ‘Taylor put her own capacity for un- affected modesty and the force of un- trained nature into the introduction of to an admiring public, so ies has found in her own equipment the elements of & Peg who reflects the charm of that form of | Irish drama which is inseparable : om the fuliness of sentiment. It i a difficult task to follow in the footstcps of an actress who, with a single pro- | duction, scaled the heights of dramatic | fame. To the credit of Miss Davies, CONTRIBUTES ABOUT she had the courage to undertake it, and she reveals an emotional endow- | ment which is alded by that factlity | | which comes only to the experienced | | performer. Probably it should be rec- | | ognized that there can be only one| Peg in the mold of Laurette Taylor— | only one immortal picture of the rustic | girl who placed affection above the| 40 SUITS ANNUALLY TO A LOS ANGELES CHARITABLE Bov” INSTITUTION - SAMOYED DOG APPEARING wealth of the world—but Miss Davies | fashions a crescendo in sounding the notes of character which make the {timid fisherman’s daughter develop into a fine example of an inspired per- sonality. Her work is sincere, and she has succeeded in creating a new Peg, worthy to carry on the tradition. “Peg 0' My Heart” has been provided with picturesque scenes among the buoyant citizens of the Emerald Isle, with plenty of the native music, ac- companied by dancing, and the neigh- borly customs which reach a climax when & whole community is thrown into gloom by the loss of a fishing craft. The magnetic force of this en- vironment is revealed by Peg's remark after she has gone to claim her in- heritance: “When I see the shamrock growing, I'll know I'm safe at home.” S probably would have been an easy job ings at the studio for “Tugboat Annie,” OWN NAME d it by trucks 40 miles from the ocean lamps, buoys, hawsers and other sea- 0 were transported in the same way. Esteemed there not only because his work as head of the Danish Olym- ed in Denmark. For “Paddy” is wanted a child be- For There is no professional lywood. FIVE LABOR LEADERS OUSTED IN JERSEY Bridge Workers’ President An-| nounces Result of Trial for Misuse of Powers. By the Associated Press ST. LOUIS, Mo., June 24—Paul J. Morrin, president of the International | Association of Bridge, Structural and Ornamental Iron Workers, announced yesterday that five New Jersey labor yleaders had been ousted from member- ship. | ‘The men, he said, had been found guilty of misuse of their powers, after a trial before the general executive board here. During the hearing, which began yesterday, Morrin and other offi- cials declined to make public anything concerning the trial. Among the ousted officials is T. M. Brandle, business agent of the Jersey | City local of the Ironworkers' Union, ing Trades Council, president of the Jersey City Building Trades Council and a powerful figure in New Jersey politics. Others are John Delaucy and Harry Newman, officers of the Jeisey City Ironworkers’ local: Thomas J. Sherlock, business agent of the Newark local, and ‘Thomas J. Kelley, business agent of the Perth Amboy, N. J., local. The trial had attracted wide atten- tion in New Jersey, where it had been interpreted as the beginning of a cam- paign by organized labor against rack- eteering. HIS HEART OVERWORKED, | GEORGE THE CLOWN’ DIES| Long Day and Night of Playing| for Children Proves Too Much for Noted Performer. By the Associated Press. | DETROIT, June 24—The last per- formance of George Phillips, 40, better | known as “George the Clown,” ended | yesterday in death. | Early Thursday morning, after Phil- | lips had spent the long hot day and | night in performing his antics for hun- | dreds of laughing children at an amuse- ment park, an attendant found him unconscious in his dressing tent. He his grease paint and motiey. “An overworked heart due to the heat,” doctors said. Beside his ability as a clown, Phil- lips was a mural painter, and half a dozen Detroit buildings today display specimens of his art. He had appeared with his troupe of trained dogs in the films. e —r —Conditioned Alr—Carefally Cooled— L. 8/Way S g better show at. [ AT Naughtical-Nuttical Screen Musical Notable in the support of Miss Du- vies is the acting of Onslow Stevens, J. Farrell MacDonald and Juliette Compton, while the dog., “Michael,” is well cast and expertly trained. In addition to the feature fiim at the Palace, there is a Laurel and Hardy District’s Heroes in the MUSEMENTS.’ Out Where the Movies Begin How To Get Into Movies arx Brothers Are Told By One Who Did— Making Their New “zture, ""Duck Soup.” BY MOLLIE MERRICK. HOLLYWOOD, Calif, June 24 (N.AN.A).—A good many letters drift my way about one thing and another. But & good 75 per cent of them want to know what one has to do to become a motion picture actor. I had it in mind the other day when I ran into Bruce Cabot. Here. T sald to myself is & typical fellow—a Success. but not one of the overnight-loud shouts of Hollywood. A chap who has climbed and fought his way along and who is | holding his own steadily and forging forward a little bit with every picture So I asked him what preparation he | had for movies. Bruce Cabot’s face broke into a smile. Which means that the dark counte- |nance was brightened by a flash of white teeth, his keen eyes softened and his Indian-like face relaxed with the humor of the situation. “I earned my first dollar,” he told o (e the New Mexico plains. Then I became sparring partner for a prize | fighter. Then I was a sailor for a while on rough and tumble tramp steamers. After several brawls in which I learned the manly art of self-defense by watching hands and feet and even | teeth, I got the idea that there must b; something in the higher education idea “So I invaded Tennessee and en- rolled at the university of the South at Sewanee. I had a couple of other alma maters—the University of New Mexico and later the University of Tours. I worked my way along and I've done a little bit of everything to get the dough. I've worked with American surveying parties traversing the bad lands, I've been in the oil fields, in the wholesale paper business and I've sold real estate—and not in Southern California. I did a hitch in the National Guard—wanted to find out how soldiers use their fists. Then with a handful of degrees and a few scars to my credit I decided to take Hollywood by the ear. “Hollywood took me by the ear, al- though I got a job as a bouncer in a night club in order to find out what it was all about. I got plenty in those first days—did without a lot—fou like a tiger to hold my own and kept thering the bones of dead cattle | ght | alcohol, so all you have to do is drain the sap and add water to suit taste. “Our cotton plantation will produce the finest wool suits in America. “And our coconuts. walnuts, pecan nuts and peanuts will be trained to say ‘To you!' at regular intervals.” I heard no more—frenzied by such foolishness I dashed out of the studio commissary searching for a calm dull person who would soothe me. A volce shouted at my back. | “Hey” yelled Groucho, “our princi- | pal crops will be sour grapes for other comedians and raspberries for super- | visors!™ | (Copyright. 193, by North American News- 2 aper Alliance, Inc.) | “GOLD DIGGERS” HELE OVER ANOTHER WEEK | Hit Musical Film Remains at the Metropolitan by Popular Demand. “The Gold Diggers of 1933" is continuing its successful run at Warner's Metropolitan for another week. | Breaking all records at this down- | town theater, after having done the | same & week ago at the Earle, this | musical extravaganza, a sequal to the popular “42d Street,” is notable for its music, the lavishness of its scenes, and | for a cast. which includes Ruby Keeler, | Dick Powell. Guy Kibbe, Joan Blondell, Aline MacMahon and others. Important features of the production | are the myriad of handsome girls, who | pirouette around with violins in a | sumptuous revue scene reminiscent of the Ziegfeld Follles, the ‘“Forgotten Man"” finale (which we believe to be in | the wrong place); the dancing and the smiles performed by Miss Keeler: the singing of Dick Powell and the comedy scenes between Miss MacMahon, who runs away with the show, and Guy | Kibbe. The only member of the cast who seems out of place is Warren William, | who of late has been having a “tough” time getting the Tight kind of & break. | Mr. William just doesn't belong in World War Compiled by Sergt. L. E. Jaeckel comedy carrying numerous grotesque situations, not the least of which is the device of having the chief mem- bers of the cast marry each other’s| sisters, with the actors taking the| women's roles as well as their own. on the job morning, noon and night. | “Gold Diggers.” But the others do, and That holds good from the day Yyou | there is no reason why you won't enjoy enter pictures until you become a star.” | gne of the handsomest, lightest and 5 . little kiddies, is prepara- | prightest and of Summer musical tion for a motion picture career from | reyyes, a fine tanned laughing chap who is| “The picture has a plot, but not the was rushed to a hospital, still wearing | The news reel presents the speech of Premier MacDonald before the London Economic Conference. There is also & Pitzpatrick travel talk on New Zea- land. D.C.C. 8 recorded in the official citation Jacob H. Heckman, second lieu- tenant, United States Marine Corps, 2d Division, American Expeditionary Force, was awarded the Navy Cross for extraordi- nary heroism in action with the enemy in the Bois de Belleau, France, June 25, 1918. With the assistance of three sergeants, Lieut. Heckman set out KATE IS BACK HOME. Kate Smith, Washington blues singer, who has become internationally famous on the radio and in pictures, was one of the notables “;91: dropped b:\éa stage to destroy the final [ 8t Loew’s Fox eater yesterday .unds‘,( {m enemy | Welcome Cherry and June Preisser, in the Bois de Bel- | “Dixie’s dancing darlings,” who are leau, an impreg- | playing there this week. It is under- nable position |stood that Miss Smith is spending a where enemy guns |few days in Washington visiting her were concealed by |parents before going on her vacation. rocks and heavy oot shrubbery. With only & pistol, BAND CONCERT. he rushed the nest,| By the United States Soldiers' Home which was offering | Band, this evening at the bandstand at the most violent | 5:30 o'elock. John S. M. Zimmermann, resistance, ~ and|bandmaster: Anton Pointner, assistant. captured two of | March, “Rule of the People”. .Karl King the enemy at each | Overture, “Son and Stranger,” position. After ef- Mendelasohn fecting the com- ' Introduction to third act and “Bridal typical of a thousand others here in this colony. The Marx Brothers are making “Duck Soup.” It's their next picture and they are writing it themselves. But they have other interests also. In addition to owning a prize-fighter and a gold mine, Groucho tells me he will be in business for himself shortly for any number of original products that only a Marx could market. “For instance,” says Groucho, “we will raise camphor, arnica and witch- hazel bushes for use on our fighter, ‘Canvasback Cchen.’ “We’ll cross onions with life-savers so people can consume both together and save valuable time. This is espe- cially designed to aid producers and supervisors whose time is worth money. “We have perfected the pretzel- shaped asparagus, so arranged that the Juice will not flow down the arm. “We've crossed corn with t writers, so arranged that a bell rings when you get to the end of the ear. Invaluable for Hollywood entertaining. ‘We will cross juniper trees with plete reduction of | = Chorus” from “Lohengrin” the last element, he marched his pris- s ical cg;me | oners to the rear under a severe and harassing fire enemy. With the rank of first lieutenant, Ma- rine Corps, he is retired and resides in Washington at 2877 Audubon ter- | race. from the retreating Fairbanks, Jr., Returns, NEW YORK, June 24. (#).—Douglas Fairbanks, jr., returned on the Bremen yesterday after a vacation with his father in London. “I never felt such genuine friendli- ness to America,” he said of England. “I think they are more friendly to us than we are to them.” The Rossdhu Castle Club Offers Summer Open Dance Tonight at 10 P.M. ACADEMY ©f Periect Sound FPhotosls: | 8th at G S.E. E. Lawrence Phillips’ Theater Beautiful Healthful, Modern Cooling System BILL BOYD in “LUCKY DEVILS JACK HOXIE, “VIA PON 2 “OLANCY OF THE MOU! ASHTOR 10re3' UDAPEST.”_Serial and_ CAROLINA riiz® Ataint™ £ Eomed __AND JULEPS.” el FA““.AWN ANACOSTIA. D. C. DICKIE_MOORE in_“OLIVER TWIST.” PRINCESS 119 B St. NE. ) m\VhEcknlure—luu_'i"nrin P.M.) JONES in “UNKNOWN _VALLEY BERTA VAUGHN In “LOVE IN GEAR.® e - STA 'r 6th and C Sts. ST AT ON ot St B LIVAN _in “PAY NO COVER CHARGE e One mile_from Chevy Chase Circle. on Brookville ‘Road. After entering Forest. keep to left. BUCK HIGH MUCH FUN! MORE FUN FINE AND PLENTY OF FUN NOW FROM MORE THAN FIFTY FEATURES AT [ERRE ADMISS ION ] BETHESDA. MD, f_Western Eleetrio " with JOE E. BR( . “The Devil Home of THE GREAT" apter of new serial, __Maynard STATE T Matinee. __H 22 TAKOMA - “}. o' p.m LEN ECH() NT PARK | Bower, Captain George. On 1 July de- | tached MB, NYd, Mare Island, Calif., to First Separate Training Battalion, | USS ARKANSAS. Monson, Captain George E. On 1 July detached MB, NYd, Mare Island, Calif., to First Separate Training Bat- talion, USS ARKANSAS. | Finch, 1st Lt. Charles S. By Executive | Order ordered to report to Secretary | | of War for duty with Civilian Con- | | servation Corps, and on receipt of | orders from Secretary of War placed | on temporary duty status from MB, | NYd, Washington, D. C. i | Boles, 2nd Lt. Claude I. On 1 July detached MCB, NOB. San Diego, | Calif, to MB, NYd, Mare Lsland, Calif. | Earnshaw, 2nd Lt. Joseph W. Detached MCB, NOB. San Diego, Calif,, to MB NAS, San Diego, Calif, Hamel, 2nd Lt. Lester S. On 1 July detached MB, Norfolk Navy Yard,| Portsmouth, Va., to NAS, Pensacola, Fla. Authorized to delay enroute to 6 August. Heinlein, 2nd Lt. Oscar A, jr. Orders to MCB, NOB, San Diego, Calif, modified to MD, USS NEW YORK, to report on board at San Pedro, Calif, on 28 June. Tavern, 2nd Lt. Joseph J. Detached MD, RS, NYd, Boston, Mass., to MB, NYd, Boston, Mass Winfree, 2nd Lt. Frederick B. Orders to MCB, NOB, San Diego, Calif., modified to MD, USS MARYLAND, to report on board at San Pedro, Calif., | on 28 June. | EX-ROYAL SE RVANT DIES HONOLULU, June 24 (#).—Samuel { Manu, coachman of Queen Liliuokalani, {last ruler under the Hawalian mon- | archy, died here yesterday at the age | of 73 'years. Manu, before becoming the Queen’s | coachman, served as footman to King | Kalakaua, last of the male Hawailan rulers. | *“He was a grand old man and a lovely character,” said Gov. Lawrence L}‘gv Jug& “His death is a great blow me. DANCING. der Federal charges with his twin! brother, Isaac Ezra. The narcotics, the officers said Ezra told them, were smuggled from China in secret compartments of wooden oil barrels. Heiress Weds Screen Singer. CHICAGO, June 24 (#).—The Chi- cago Tribune says it learned yesterday that Miss Peggy Jane McCray, l'I-l year-old Tulsa, Okla., oil heiress, and | Alexander Gray, stage and acrc:ni singer, were married at Crown Point, Ind, on June 17. | i Scasen T Ay it ne) H & e oritns g | INCLUDING SWIMMING DANCING “MELODY CRUISE” Charlie Ruggles—Phil Harris and Maddening Girls Take the Boat to MARSHALL HALL PAR the Potomac. Amusements, rides and every- thing! Lunch on boat if desired. ROUND TRIP Children 25c Sehedute: Daily including Sunday WARNER BROS. THEATERS [} Ly. Washington :30 A. M., 1:30, 5:30, 8:30 P. M. Lv. Marshall Hail Park— 00 Noon, 3:45, 6:45, 10:25 P. M. MOUNT VERNO 50 The most glorious approach to George Washington’s homestead is via the Potomac. Only an hour’s run on the modern steamship “City of Washington.” Daily ercent Sunday . M., 1:30 P. M. .12:20 and 4:05 P. M. MOONLIGHT TRI with DANCING Searchlight discloses points of interest along shore. 3¢ _ndmission Vernon) PS Mt. Vernon. Boat stops at Marshall Hall Park. 55 Nightly ac 8:30 Suns. & Nolidars 15¢ M DANCING _LOW _SUMMER | SALL rates; class Tuesds, SERIPUPDIy WILSON LINE Tth Street Wharves NA. 2440 JACK OAKIE in “FROM HELL TO HEAV JACK HOLT IN “SPORTING AGI HIPPODROME %5 2% vell. “ROAD TO_SINGAPO! ton. “AFTER THE BAL MT. RAINIER. MD. Double_Feature ARCADE Kent_Taylor. “MY! ~'COCKEYED ANIMAL WORLD. DIRECTION SIDNEY LUST M Double Feature I0US RIDI Chesapeake Bomsh, M. HAPPY HOURS Swinmioy Dancieg Amssements Salt Water Jarbes's Pleaty. Poel Night Hawks o “Join the Big Parade” Trains leave District Line Sta Saturday and Sundav. 9, 10. Other Days. 9:00. 10:30, 5:10. Rognd Trip Tickets, B0u; Children, i0e. tion :30, WoODWARD W™U™F a0 O Srmrs | Kind that you need torture yourself | about. E. de 8. M. { $900 for Film Cartoon. | I PASADENA, Calif., June 24 (P).— Volney L. White, an artist, who sued | Romer Grey, son of Zane Grey, the | author. for $756,250, was awarded $900 | today by Judge Walton Wood for work | done in making an animated cartoon. a PRy | Jim Tully to Wed. | LOS ANGELES, June 24 (#.—Jim | Tully, film scenario writer, and Myrtle | Zetow, film studio secretary, filed no- | tice ‘at the county marriage license | bureau at Ventura, Calif., yesterday of intention to wed. Tully gave his age at 42 and his bride-to-be said she was 35. It will be Tully’s third marriage. Ype-| | WARNER BROS.COOLTHEATRES NOW SHOWING BARBARA STARWYCK in “BABY FACE” WALTER (¥kay) OREEFE MEYROPOLITAN & LoTHROP Prone Distmer 5300 Offered for One Week Only— Beginning Monday, June 26th Kathleen Mary Qumla- COMPLETE HOME TREATMENT FOR QUICK REJUVENATION AND EXQUISITE MAKE-UP ~THE FIG CAC AVENUE GRA_P?D O atinee—2:00, a M. A ] RIDER” E ) T] LAHTETI. t. D and E ENTRA| Sts. N.W. Smoking Permitted in_Balcon; WHEELER WOOLSEY. MANTACS.” _Comedy and_Short Ga. Ave. & Farragut St NW “BELOW THE SEA HOME TT1230 © st NE. ZANE GREY'S “UNDER TONTO RIM.” “Serial_and Comedy SAVOY 14th St. & B “PLEASURE CRUISE flVOLr'“" St. & Park Bd. N.W. Matinee—2:00 P.M. H L STHI § NT” \ 1 ( YO Ga. Ave. & Quebes St Now. HE BIG CAGE” SECO SILVEK SPRINi ML RS UEAVRN A M TERROR TRAIL” _Mat. O L L FALM THEATER % 2% e et Four DeLuxe Preparations in a Special Introductory Set Poudre des Perles Facial Oil Miss Quinlan's marvelous Strawberry Cream Mask com- bines the rejuvenating powers of sleep and a facial—follow it with her silky Facial Oil—her Magic Make-up Lotion and the gossamer Poudre des Perles—and you will turn a new, younger, more radiant face toward the Summer. MISS HELEN WEST Miss Quinlan’s Salon Representative will be in our Toiletries Section for consultation. No charge for consultations. TOILETRIES, AISLE 16, Fmrst FLOOR, Strawberry Cream Mask Make-up Lotion