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AMUSEMENTS., Joan Bennett. though what would happen to them 1f they practiced wha. they preached? Mr. Coleman is perfect in his some- what imperfect role—and Miss Ben- nett is nice to look upon (she needs, however, a little fire and thunder). Colin Clive is splendid as the dis- agreeable brother. ‘The first part is especially amus- ing—the dialogue bright and Mr. Cole- man even brighter. It's when Miss Bennett gets that money bug in her ear that things begin to slip. x x x % A SPECIAL word for Phil Lampkin’s overture this week. It's darn good. Mr. Grofe would be particular- |ly delighted if he could hear what | the Fox symphonians do to his music. * K ok % JOE MORRISON, who can sing “The Last Round-Up" better than any- body, is the star of the stage show, singing songs that you like to hear with a voice that you also like to hear. As a member of the company said backstage yesterday, “You're pipes are better than ever, Joe"—which is probably true. Mr. Morrison’s voyag- ings in the cinema world have not dulled his vocal cords and he can stand up on the stage and sing with the best of them. The remainder of the bill includes two brawny and brainy gentlemen, named the Carr brothers, who have a very fine strong-man act; Ross and Edwards, back again with their familiar, but still amusing nonsense, | and Helen Compton and her Bryn | Mawr Orchestra. Miss Compton’s orchestra is better than most girl bands if not up to Ina Ray Hutton's. As yet she hasn’t mas- tered the Ina Ray Hutton art of com- plete abandon. She, however, guides her orchestra with a particularly nice- looking pair of hands. The last num- ber, the cowboy one, although not 50 good as Mr. Morrison's previous sing- ing on the same subject, is well staged. The “Our Gang” comedy has a baby in it who some day will be Garbo. At the Fox B—14 s Ronald Cdlman Is Star In New Film at the Fox “The Man Who Broke the Bank at Monte 9y Carlo” Features Popular Player—Joe Morrison Heads Stage Show. BY E. de 5. MELCHER. HE best way to remember the unusual title of the new film at the Fox, “The Man Who Broke the Bank at Monte Carlo,” is to remember the song of the same name. By humming this all the way through the picture you will find yourself greatly aided in remembering one of the longest, if not the longest, titles ever to burst out of Hollywood. Incidentally, it fits the story very neatly—inasmuch as that’s exactly what does happen. Twice—or almost twice.g————————————————————— We have a feeling, however, that the title is more important than the film. Some of it is very amusing; Ronald Colman is excel- lent and Joan Bennett is very pretty. But— when Mr. Colman turns to Miss Bennet! in that cabaret scene after he has been there only a mo- ment and after he has seen her sitting at the next table doing nothing, how then, when he dances with her, can | he say, “I enjoyed your song very| much”—when she didn’t have a song? | This little item forces us to be\le\e that the film has been trifled with here and there, and that the ending is too phoney to be altogether agree- | able. Sons and daugnters of ancient Russia will be hardly pleased with the picture that is drawn of them—every member of royalty having a napkin | over his left arm and running when he hears the word “Waiter!” Or else! driving & taxicab in sables and a white tie and eating anly white bread, coffee and cheese. The picture proves, however, that | there is definite interest in a man breaking Monte Carlo's time-honored | bank. So much so that when Mr. Colman, relic of Russia, and a demon | at cards, snuffs out every sou the| first time he gambles there, the man- | egement of the place feels it necessary | to have Miss Bennett, night club siren, run after him with the hope of luring | him back. This she does after he has fallen in love with her on an Alpine cliff (will you tell me how they ever got off that hill?) only to find that| ghe has fallen in love with him, too. | Her last remark in the picture is “1 can love you now that you haven't any mone; which seems a little strange—in fact, very strange. But such is the way with the movies—al- DR. HODGES’ BURIAL AT GLENWOOD TODAY Former Member of District of Co-| lumbia Medical Society in Miami 20 Years. Funeral services for Dr. John W. Hodges, 78, formerly of this city, who died Wednesday at Miami. Fla., were to be held at 2 o'clock this afternoon in Hines' funeral home, 2901 Four- teenth street. Burial was to be in Glenwood Cemetery. Dr. Hodges was a member of the Medical Society of the District from 1906 to 1913. He left here more than 20 years ago to practice in Miami, | epecializing in nervous and mental | diseases. Prior to practicing medicine, msny vears ago Dr. Hodges had been in the drug business in Washington and An- napolis. . REV. JOSEPH MAS-JANER Funeral Mass Is Celebrated for| C. U. Canon Law Student. Had Long Been Il Rev. Joseph Mas-Janer, a student in the School of Canon Law at Ca- tholic University, died Thursday in the Jenkins Memorial Hospital, Balti- more, after a long illness. The funeral mass was celebrn!ed‘ at 8 am. today by the hospital chaplain. Although a secular priest, Father Mas-Janer had lived at the Cupuchin College on Harewood road northeast during the past four or five ye-m while pursuing his studies. At the| time of his illness, he was working | on his thesis leading toward the doctor’s degree. He was born in Spain and received the degrees of doctor of philosophy | and doctor of sacred theology in the universities of that country before going to Puerto Rico as a missionary. | He came to the United States from Puerto Rico. -———— CLARENCE L. BOWMAN DIES OF LONG ILLNESS| Joe Morrison, singing star of motion pictures and the radio, may be seen currently at Loew's Fox Theater, where he is one of the featured entertainers in the stage show, |“TWO FISTED” PICTURE HAS UNHAPPY MOMENTS! Roscoe Karns and Lee Tracy Are| Chief Figures in New Film at Columbia. ROSCOE KARNS, aided and abetted by Lee Tracy, his abstemious| manager, punches and jabs his way into “Eastchester” society in the cur- rent Columbia film, “Two Fisted.” This celluloid society is composed of a Gracie Allen ash blond, a country club bore of Falstaffian proportions, Oxonian, a decorative heroine, and| handsome Kent Taylor, who first ap- pears top-hatted and tipsy With 48 hours of masculinity on his chin. The film has no story—it is a suc- cession of incidents and stock situa- “lons about which the actors appear .Clarence L. Bowman, 64, superin- | tendent of the building of the National | Electrical Supply Co., 1330 New York avenue, died last night at his home, %28 Farragut street, after a long illness. Mr. Bowman, & resident of this city | for more than 20 years, was active in | the Masonic fraternity here, belonging | to Lebanon Lodge, F. A. A. M, and | Eureka Chapter, R. A. M. He is sur- vived by his widow, Mrs. Annie M. Bowman. Funeral services will be held at the residence Monday at 11 am., to be| followed by services at 1 p.m. in the chapel of the Baltimore, Md., Ceme- | tery. i BAND CONCERT. By the Soldiers’ Home Band Orches- tra at Stanley Hall at 5:30 o'clock. John 8. M. Zimmermann, bandmaster; | Anton Pointner, associate leader. March, “Florentiner”. --Fucik | Overture, “Triumphant”_._Von Suppe ‘A Southern rhapsody, “Virginia,” ‘Woods-Hayden Excerpts from musical comedy, “Sweet Adeline” Kern Oriental serenade, “Visions d’Arabe,” Valse, “Idylle” -Razigale Finale, “The Flying Ace”___Zamecnik “The Star Spangled Banner.” —_— PLAN JUBILEE DANCE A “harvest jubilee dance,” spon- sored by the Athletic Association of the Federal Housing Administration, will be held this evening at the Raleigh Hotel at 10 o'clock. The fea- ture of the evening will be an tn- ennounced prize dance. The program committee is headed by Miss Lucile Lennox. Other mem- bers of the committee are Miss Corine McKenny and Miss Lindon Hargis. A to care little, and for which we defi- | nitely care less. If you are interested, Karns finally wins a fight, abolishes his double negatives and wins the maid. Gail Patrick gets a divorce and the Oxford Union chap. Taylor, on the verge of dipsomania, is persuaded to substitute the fistic art for cock- tails, and Tracy is embraceq by the| squealy blonde. The people who are involved in all this seem to be un- happy even unto the fade-out. If ever we gaze upon another short about “Zekes” and “pappies” we shall | scream. It's time there was an ordi- nance forbidding William Faulkner and hill billies—two subjects upon which, with little provocation, we wax | vehement. And while the “man from Mississippl” could not possibly get within swearing distance of the Hays office, the mournful mountaineers (who can’t feel as bad about their yodeling as we do) continue their banjo plucking at local theaters, in- ! cluding the Columbia, presumably for the ticket purchasers whose I Q. is minus four. ‘We wanted to yell yesterday evening' when we saw harmonicas and shot- guns, but the usher had & glint in his eye, so, Milquetoast-like, we slunk into our coat and muttered. The most appetizing bit of Colum- bia's fare this week Is the “Magic Carpet,” which floats over Rio, the rolling Pampas, estancias, and the beauty of Argentina. Charley Chase’s antics and " the usual newsreel complete the program. M. W, e 0ld Tower Crashes. Just after a party of girls had de- scended from a hundred-foot tower in Rabenstein Castle, near Dessau, Ger- many, the tower was blown down by the wind and some of the stones, which had stood for 600 years, crashed through the roof of & cottage. A W Miriam Hopkins and Joe McCrea have which will be the next attraction at Loew's Fox Theater. Distributors Jump Film’s Release Date “Crusades” Comes to Palace a Bit Ahead | of Itself. WWELL, well, well. How times does fly. It seems like only yester- day that Mr. Cecil B. DeMille's big | cinematic noise, entitled “The Cru- sades,” came to town and played the | Capital’s Drama Groups “The First Legion” the leading roles in “Splendor,” screen play by Rachel Crothers, C., 4 Planned by Black- friars. “Merry Wives” Monday. BY HARRY MacARTHUR. RANK BAER'S new farce, Guy, Winkler,” is going on the I a city audience. The out-of- twon “tryout” will be presented De- cember 9 at Riverdale, Md., home town e! T C. Gardiner, who has the leading The play will be at Pierce Hall on | the two following nights, with the author’s New York agent, Miss Edith Gordon, in town for the local open- “That | road before it opens here to face | National Theater at fancy prices. In | jno " Otners beside Mr. Gardiner in fact, it was only day before yesterday, | the cast are Mary Lillias Garretson, but out in" Hollywood, and in film | Chgrjes A, Bell, Felice Lioyd, Clar- distributing offices—where they do | ence Ruebsam, Yerby Pannill Ed- ihings fast—1936 is here already. mynq Evans, Neota Silvers, William For during its first appearance here, | Austen Davis, Evelyn Schweizer. the sponsors of this super-super epic | praneis S. Koonce, Lois Alexander and advised the citizens to run down and | Roy Poole. Mr. Baer's comedy is be- | pay through the nose to see it, be- | ing directed by Howard Wentworth. | cause it positively would not be “shown in Washinglon again this year,” that phrase being a bit tricky | itself, as you can see. tions in a Jesuit community, will be The cash customers behaved ac-|presented here during the first week cordingly, and may now pass the long | in February, produced by the Black- rainy evenings arguing about whether | friars Guild and sponsored by the or not the were EYFPCd | Catholic Students’ Mission Crusade. At any rate, “The Crusades” has| John Victory was named executive | taken up residence at the Palace|chairman of arrangements and & | Theater this week, and we suspect general committee, composed of Rev. that the people who meet the tariff | Louis C. Vaeth, Rev. John McLarney, at that house definitely will not feel | 0. P.; Willlam McDonald, C. J. Wit- they have been taken into camp. It|tler, president of the Blackfriars all depends upon whether or not you ; Guild, and Richard Brady, was ap- | like a spectacle, a big fuss imagina- | pointed at a meeting last Sunday | tively conceived, and brilliantly photo- | the Willard, when the joint presenta- graphed. | tion was decided upon. Mr. De Mille is a specialist in that| “The First Legion” had its premiere line, and when he is let loose with | in New York and has played to capac- 10, 000 extras and one luscious lead- ity audiences in Boston, Philadelphia ing woman, he has no peer. because no one wants to compete showing. with him, and maybe because no one “The Pirst Legion,” drama of the lives of men following religlous voca- Seven nights a week aren't even Maybe | and Chicago. This is its first local | | dramatic art pupils in a recital next Friday at the Petworth Methodist Church, Grant Circle and New Hamp- | shire avenue, at 8 pm. They will do scenes from “Little Women,” Barrie's Dear Brutus” and “Why the Chimes | Rang” and will be assisted by piano pupils of Thelma Callahan and the junior choir of the church. “Squaring the Circle,” Valentine | Katayev's Soviet satire on the sy: tem of registering and “unregistering” which until recently constituted the Russian marriage and divorce laws, first was produced in Russia in 1928 and has been running in a number of Russian cities and towns ever since. Several important little thea- ters in this country produced the pl last year and a professional produc- tion has been runing in New York | since October 3. The first Washington presentation of the comedy is to be by the Studio of Theater Arts December 10 and 11 at the Wardman Park Theater, un- der the direction of Constance Con- | nor Brown. HINDA WAUSAU HETURNS Gayety Burlesque Attraction Be- | ginning Tomorrow. i INDA WAUSAU, direct from a seven months’ engagement at Leon | & Eddie’s in New York, returns to burlesque to be the featured attrac- tion at the Gayety Theater for one week, starting with the Sunday mat- inee. Lillian Dixon and her all-star revue comprise the other half of Jimmy Lake's “daily double feature.” SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1935. Dream South Is Pictured In Film “So Red the Rose” Handsome Pathos Is Delivered and Bright Moments of Comedy Give Variety to Production at Earle. BY ROBERT B. PHILLIPS, Jr. N WRITING of what the boys in the back room call the Old South, it is l customary to assume that prior to the war between the States everything on the old plantation was sweet magnolia, moonlight and mint juleps. ‘Tradition further demands that any portrait of post-bellum Dixie shall reveal a gentle, kindly people; cruelly impoverished and ravished of pride, honor and wealth by the malevolent forces of the North. The transitional stage, depicting the process of divest-gr— ment, is supposed to guarantee the most poignant drama possible. These theories are all very well for the children’s story books, and they may prove satisfactory to some who behold their dramatization in “So Red the Rose” at the Earle this week. We must insist, however, that such an at- titude merely glosses over a civiliza- tion, a people and a conflict much more interesting than the spurious legend that has grown up about them. The net result, in other words, is a fairly phony South. CRETE F YOU are not interested in what kind of a South you get, so long as the screen fare on Thirteentn | street this week is entertaining, we can promise you that it is. Sullavan, Walter Connolly and Ran- dolph Scott deliver some really hand- some pathos on occasion (We thought | Miss Sullavan’s moment with tue death message something that should | be required reading for all neophyte thespians) and there are a few bright moments of comedy contributed by Robert Cummings as a flighty youin from Texas, and by Elizabeth Patter- son as a wry old maid. In certain other interludes inept direction (King Vidor has a fine in- stinct for using excellent Negro choruses at the wrong time) will make you squirm in your chair, and there are some banalities fn the script which appear almost unbelievable, coming from the combined quills of Laurence Stallings, Maxwell Anderson and Ed- win Justus Mayer. Margaret | The whimsies anent psychic visions and hysterical dreams are regarded with rather too much seriousness, it seemed to us, but that sort of thing is offset by sentimentality ripely sea- soned for the rebel trade. The Con- federates were liberally represented at | Messrs. Warner’s show shop yester- day, hurling rebel yells from the bal- | cony and hissing the Yanks. Even AMUSEMENTS. ADVIVUSEM NTS. Ty A s Week Betinning Mon, Dee. 3. A'l' uu.ulG wu.una ING GOES? wide BENAY VENUTA - IRENE MV—II!W" 'SUN. AFT. AT 3. NEWMAN Traveltalks—Color Views—Motlon res the visitors from Maine couldn't show | a dry eye, when massa was in the cold, cold ground, and the mean old bluecoats set fire to the Portbello mansfon house. =k TWO colored performers, Daniel Haynes and Clarence Muse, also deserve a credit line for their work. | The latter’s limning of a squelched | Moses to the slaves was one of the su- | perior bits in the film. Benny Davis' “Star Dust Revue of 1935" was rather coldly received by its ! initial audience yesterday, but man- aged to warm the hearts and paddies of the customers when Darlene Wal- ders, an acrobatic dancer: Petey, a harmonica artist; Barr and Estes, ec- centric hoofers, and one or two others held the floor. The remainder of the protracted stage bill varied from bad to indifferent. The Earle also has a “Popeye” car- toon and other shorts, and the feature is introduced with a pleasing prologue of old melodies, well sung by Bert Granoff. The background slides for this interlude are terrible. Just close | your eyes and listen. 'OldKingCole Takes Stage For Childrer Other \oted Flgules of Nursery Realm at National. FA‘.\(ILIAR people of the nursery. preserved in books for successive ’lractitm. and it is acted with unusual skill. It compares favorably with the other offerings of this company. Its plot deals with the search for a third fido]fl when one of the trio has grown too tall, and in the successful hunt a crime is discovered. carrying the dramatic interest of the whole. The young fiddler, who finally makes up the Kin3's three is played by. Rob- ert Rudie, an excellent violinist, while his sister, who dances to his music, is played with unusual grace by Jewel Morse Other roles are well done. offering of the company “Robin Hood,” December 27 —D. C. C. The next will be i ACADEMY T Of Perfect So generations of children, rarely appear AMUSEMENTS. in person as they did yesterday in the children’s performance at the Na- tional Theater. Even in the pages of highly colored works they serve to arouse the imaginations of the vivid juvenile age, but when they walk the stage and wear curious costumes and talk the well-remembered rhymes, they become a source of inspiration to children—and adults. “Old King Cole” was the immediate cause of the assembling of a great | audience at the Naticnal yesterday, but the Children’s Theater of New York. which made the production and brought it‘here, had several surprises in store for its Washington friends. First of all, there was an oppor- tumly to see Clare Tree Major, able director and author of many of the | plays which have made the organiza- | tion a success. She was the Queen of Hearts, appearing in a character she had created in writing this story of “Old King Cole and His Fiddlers Three.” She received a hearty wel- come from the young friends that have been made by her organization in Washington during the last four years. While King Cole himself was splen- Mw:gmztSuflaflan | A Peramount Puctre SORED rweROSE w4 WALTER CONNOLLY o sTac BENNY Illll! l IlIS REVUE “S0 Red the Rose™ Can Aiso Be Seen Tomerrow, Mon. & Toes. At The Ambassador zW% 25¢ To_Roon BERT ROBT I WHEELER WOOLSEY 15 R K 0's COMEDY RioT | didly played by John O’Connor, and CAROLINA ' DUMBARTON | PRINCESS else could get away with it, even if the yen prodded. In this instance he selected an ideal | history was more colorful, violent, eruel or impassioned than the crusade to recover Jerusalem. | enough for subject for his talents. No war in|" the Columbia Players. They are rehearsing Susan Glaspell's “Inheritors,” building scenery for the play. keeping “Uncle Vanya” in re- hearsal, reading scripts for next sea- | son, teaching new members stage and back-stage technique and completing | was a magnetic figure in the day events, it would appear from the nu ber of other figures of an imaginative world, that nursery rhymes are not ‘wn!l.en about lone figures of the younger literary world, but that, some- | how or other, they are all acquainted ‘and have delightful times together. Where and When Current Theater Attractions and Time of Showing. A Washington Institution BARBARA STANWYCK It is in the mass expression of these elements that the De Mille gentus ¥O'K on 8 modern shines, and quite incideatally the gen- | They're carrying on a subscription tleman also filmed a rather novel little | CAMPaign, too, o they really could use | love story while telling his tale, This | mOre time if a week could be stretched. switchboard. | facet of the drama concerns Richard | | the Lion Hearted and Berengaria (a | queen, not a steamship—although both | were of the French line. heh, heh) and |eventuully involves the Saracen chief- | | tain Saladin, by far the most attract- | | ive individual in the picture. Henry Wilcoxon, Loretta Young and Ian | Keith care for the major roles ade- | quately (and the last mentioned does | much better than that). but the real | heroes of the day are brawny °gents| P who pour boiling oil on their enemies, and the cavalry troops that charge| head-on into each other with a roar | and a crash that can be heard dis- tinctly all up and down F street. It’s s great afternoon in the theater, if you care for that sort of thing. | The Palace also boasts the habitual news reel and a short subject or two. —R. B. P, jr. 'BOARD OF STEWARDS TO MEET MONDAY Pastor of Francis Asbury M. E.| Charch South to Give Ser- mons Tomorrow. At Francis Asbury M. E. Church South tomorrow at the 11 a.m. service Rev. A. P. Shirkey will have for his subject “The Old Rugged Cross,” and at the 8 p.m. service he will preach the fourth of & series of sermons for young people, entitled “A New Social | Order.” The young people's devo- tional service will Be held at 6:45 p.m. A meeting of the Board of Stewards will be held Monday at 8 p.m. Circle No. 4 of the Woman's Mis- sionary Society will meet with Mrs. | Euzelia Felton, 203 Biltmore drive, Indian Spring Park, Md., at 8 pm. Tuesday; Circle-No. 3 with Mrs. E. E. Munsey, 1019 Monroe street, Wednes- day at 2 p.m.; Circle No. 1 with Mrs. Marvin H. McIntyre, 3106 Thirty- fourth street, Wednesday at 2 o'clock. ‘The Gamma Sigma Class meeting for December will be held at the home of Miss Ruth Hall, 1403 Webster Carillon’ Class Friday at 8 p.m. at the home of Miss Ona Bess Miller, 1615 Kenyon street. | Adh«h'flhdmltg‘ i versity. Besides the two plays mentioned above the group will do- “Sailors of Cattaro,” “Nellie, the Beautiful Cloak | and “The Shining Hour.” | Model” “Inheritors” will be presented De- cember 18 and 19. The Drama Guild is to present the first playing in this country of James Bridie's “Tobias and the Angel” De- cember 17 ahd 18 at the Wardman Park Theater. The play is being di- | | rected by Dr. De Witt Croissant, head | of the English department at George Washington University, who saw the original production in London. Cuvier Metzler, who appeared in plays when he went to Eastern High, has one of the leading roles in, the production of “Death Takes a Holi- day,” at Delaware, Ohio, by the Wes- | leyan Players of Ohio Wesleyan Uni- Yerby Pannill and Esther Marshman will the two “merry wives” when the Shakespeare Society presents the bard’s “Merry Wives of Windsor” Monday night at St. Paul's Auditorium. | Their jealous husbands will be Kent Dyer and John Victory, and Jesse Veitch, Ada Louise Townsend, Vir- ginia True. William Milton, Stanley Karmazin, James M. Rawls, Paul Murphy, Charles A. Bell, Lawrence Gichner, A. L. Diket and- John Chad- wick are in important. roles. Mr. Veitch and Mr. Dyer are doing the directing. This will be the first full-length play on the season’s schedule by the Shakespeare Society and will be, ac- cording to Teport, the first time “Merry. Wives of Windsor” has been seen hére in 15 years. Alice- Louise Hunter and four of her smallest dance pupils will augment the “Merry Wives” cast, presenting a dance number as an integral part of the fifth act. They are Betty Israel, Gloria -Masgoret, Ann Matthews and Margaret Reisling and they will be costumed by Mrs. Anna Castle. “The Tinker,” a modern -comedy which grew-out of a study of the life of St. Francis of Assisi, will be played | December 10 and 11 by the Thespian | Dramatic Soclety of Covenant-First | Presl | chusetts avenue chapel. Church at the Massa- The cast includes- Leo Quacken- bush, Rose, Vernye Barrett, George 'InchmymdAnm)luM.m Willlam H. Wagner is directing. of e * | Earle—“So Red the Rose,” at 9: 45‘ am, 12:15, 2:40, 5:10, 7:40 and 10:10 ‘ p.m. Stage shows at 11:15 am,, 1:45, 4:10, 6:40 and 9:10 p.m. | | _Loew's Fox—“Man Who Broke the Bank at Monte Carlo,” at 10:30 am., 12:50, 3:10, 5:20, 7:50 and 10:10 p.m.‘ | Stage shows at 11:55 am.,, 2:15, 4:25,| 6:55 and 9:20 p.m. Belasco—"Mr. Hobo,” at 12:08, 2:04, 4:06, 6:05, 8:05 and 10:03 p.m. Palace—"The Crusades,” at 11:30 am, 2, 4:30,'7 and 9:30 pm. | Metropolitan — “The Rainmakers,” | at 11:40 am, 1:40, 3:40, 5:40, 7:40 |and 9:40 pm. ‘ Columbia—“Two Fisted,” at 12:25, 2:20, 4:15, 6:10, 8:05 and 10 p.m. R-K-O Keith’s—"Annie Oakley,” at 11:40 am, 1:44, 3:44, 5:44, 7:44 and Tivoll—“It's in the Air” at 2, 3:05, Ambassador—"‘Charlie Shanghai,” at 2, 4, 6, 8 and 9:40 pm. Little—“Ruggles of Red Gap,” 10:09 am. 12:03, ‘1:57, 3:51, 7:39 and 9:33 p.m, Gayety—"Rainbow Girls,” noon, 2:15 and 8:15 p.m. Howard—“Shipmates Forever,” at 12:30, 3:45, 7 and 10:15 pm. S lhowsltl’d.&l.'}lndfilfipmu‘e the you supply Bn.k Books need. phone your order. E. Morrison Paper Co. hlla .NA. 2945 Sunday, December 1— 8:15 P.M. Death and After Class Wednesday, 8:15 P.M. Library Open Tu Thurs., 5 to 6; Sat., 2 to 5 UNITED LODGE OF THEOSOPHISTS Hill Building 17th and Eye Sts. N.W. No dues, Fees or collections. SANNIE omn"“ OMING ... A PICTURE YOULL . SEE WITH £ They help each other along and their current remarks magnify each other'’s importance. In addition to the Queen of Heart.m 9:44 pm. | 6:05. 7:50 and 9:35 p.m. | Chan n| at | 5:45, Come in or| it was interesting to see Humpty Dumpty, Puss in Boots, Bo Peep and Simple Simon. They looked much as they were expected to look. As a stage production, “King Cole” has some of the polish of an adult at- And Every Saturda Wednesday Nite Beginning at 9:30 P. M. MEYER DAVIS MUSIC Phil U’Brien, Cond. Ladies, 55¢ i Gents, T5c Wine and Beer Served at Tables at 12 | very | GAYETY BURLESK| % Starting This Sunday Matinee HINDA WAUSAU Walter Winchell Says She's Good ROLLER SKATING ]| RlNK Every Night, Except Thurs.. Silver Spring, Md. SPECIAL FEATURES MusIC WHERE TO DINE. THE NEW STOUFFER’S 824 14th St. N.W. Under Original Ownership PRISWE™ 35¢, 50C, 65¢ Half _Portions for Children | 2,240 Pounds to the Ton Blue Ridge Va. Hard Stove Coal, $10.75 lmld Furnace Size, $9.50 pecial Stove Size. $9.35 Nut. $10.501 Pea $8.50: Bri. 1075 Buckwheat, $7.25 Smokeless Egg, $9.50 Bituminous Coal Soot 80 Blue Hard-Structure Pa_ Bitumineus Makes Only Thin White Smoke 759% Lump Coal, $7.50 50% Lump Coal, 86.75 There Is a Reason Why World's Largest Retailers of Y LUE RIDGE COAL CO. Antbracite Hard Tt iR, Rl nia Me. O”uiu ‘exaco Off Wal 3545 Distributing Plant 8475 ©Open Daily, 7 AM. to Midnight GRIFFITH FARMS DINNERS Are epicurean delights, pre= pared by a chef of uncom- parable skill and served in congenial surroundings. Also the finest of— Seafood @A la Carte Meals QPEN DAILY A} AND SUN- nANcmG every ninA u the sic_of “Brick” Dornin “Varsity Six” mus} his D renes Famous for Food Lin 3 Miles From the Distgict Line mmmman's 7 MAN WHO BROKE THE BANK AT MONTE CARLO with JOAN BENNETT Stage $OE ISON AND OTWER ACTS riday —————— i HOPKINS - Joe MCCHEA i« SPLENDOR Stage. ED SULLIVAN & HIS REVUE FIRST TIME “5:”“! pRICES | ¥ (ic.o; PALACE I mcnuunl with wIL' ‘A" a’ ! INRY WILCOX( IANDS MICKEY MOUSE :Aucon’ @nda THANKS A MILLION® :n’vwlu-rli:luux- COI.UMBIA with LEE ROSCOE KARNS und Fhotoolay t G SE. he! an— Beautitul 1200 PM. RE COWBO! ANDIT " Jm\ CRAWPORD ADIES " ‘Y IRGINT BRUCE HAVE Chapter 3., Krazy Kat Cartoon. ' CLARENDON. VA GE RAFT_and JOAN SHE COULDNT TAKE Tith & N c; Ave SE. ouble Feature S and “"ATLANTIC e Gsn, ASHTON Bl TT “FIGHTING SHADOW ADVENTURES | TNEW) CIRCLE pniae wese ‘sia JOE E_BROWN in “BRIGHT LIGHTS.” KE| AYNARD WESTERN COURAGE.". Emwcc No. 1! " __Comedy. FAIR ANACOSTIA D.C. CK JONES nom' HANDEED GUNS © Ll LAUGHTON. in kS “RL( (;LE\ OF RED GAP. With_MARY BOLAND, CHARLES RUGGLES. ZASU _PITTS. 1119 H St. N Double Feature BILL CODY in “THE CY ANGER ¥ i i R T TAL CWHO E_BACK all of the Savage. 11 Georgia Ave: ver Sorine M Continuous Erom 14 ) PM. W ELD: “THE \IA\ ()\ THE FLYING TRAPEZE.” ._Short Subjects \THE ChivE OF GE O'BRIEN in 'I?HF _RAINE E STATE _aoroWind 3 ticnis. M. BO\‘\H:‘, SCOTLAND.” 1sa TIM McCOY_in “RF\ ENGE RIDER.” 4ih and Butternut Sts. No Parkine Troubles nuous From 1:00 P.M i CHAPLFS FARRELT n = FIGHTING YOUTH. BUCK JONES i “n ORY HANDLED GUN % |[HIPPODROME__ * 3o Sn Todav GABLE and YOUNG in’ “CALL OF THE WILD.” CAMEO Jack Holt, Edmund _ Unwelcome Stranger.” Thunder_in_Night * ARCADE_ ==sippss. v Ted Lewis “Here Comes the RICHMOND ALEXANI\RIA VA. Paul Muni. “Dr. Socraf IO(‘K}I_l E. MD. Y Tim McCoy. “Fighting Shadows.® _ AMBASS ADOR 18th St. & Col Rd. Col. 5543 WARNER OLAND, “CHARLIE CHAN HANGHAL" Major Bowes }Difeclio;l of Sidney L Amnleun 624 B St APOLLO Phon, Double Feature_-Show Staris ! NE S JPUBLIC MENACE." AVALoN-aim GENE STRATTON TER'S “FRECKLES."_Dionne | Quitapiets: AVENUE GRAND &% Double Feature—Show Starts 1 SHIRLEY P.M, TEMPLE, “CURLY prord N OF FETER GRIM. ] NORMA SHEARER: PREDRIC MARCH in_“SMILIN' THRU." c-‘;mm. TIVOL! ‘™8 % IACK BENAY 118 1N FHE AIR Cartoon. YORK % %awss, T S TFSSE THEATFR "0 & fryms "supxg_g'lm » NORMAN ey " Added Attract Hons Bhancom B Now Serial_ Matinee. 1: SYIVAN MORRIS, Western Peaturette __toon. _Mat PATM TH 'I'HI‘AT'EH “DINKY " JACKIE COOPER. MAR STO) Also Western, . Seria] Cartoon. Matinee. 2:00 P.M. —_— DANCING. CATHERINE BALLE les: b . _Practice. inste. Sane Futes Nord 118" 1981 bons. £ WARNER BROS. THEATERS => ERS. " Also Syrlal. Car- ) P.M. ll!lv RAY L]