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A—10 =x ALl USEMENTS. Mr. Fields Labors But He Brings Forth No Scripts Mr. Carmody Finds His New Desk, Unable to Conjure Up Chatter for His Radio Broadcast. BY JAY CARMODY. OLLYWOOD, August 18.—High gest sensation in Hollywood. box outside, and by some striki H man who sits at a desk on the second floor. for several hours, thinking up words wit| feud ever fought between man and a-* ventriloquist's dummy. In that same slow voice which draws millions of persons into hearing dis- tance of the feud every Sunday after- noon, Fields says he is very glad to see you. “Especially today,” says Fields. “You see this desk. (It is a kind of huge miracle of cabinetmaking with script, notes, jottings and a group of {tems like that covering its expansive surface, I bought this thing the other day because it looked like jwet what I needed for my work. Well, I was wrong. It is such a nice desk just to look at that I sit here all day, never writing a line. Every passing minute | brings Sunday closer. And I- won't| have a thing ready to say to that be-| nighted little splinter, Charley Mc- | No, not a thing. Not a Fields writes all his own script. He does not like it, but it has to be done | that way. His peculiar qualities of | comedy do not transfer easily to a ghost writer. (While Fields is talking his profile 1s being sketched by Tom Benton.| Mr. Benton, the littlest and mightiest | of the leftists in art at the moment, | has given up harassing the tories for | & little while to catch Hollywood on | the end of his pencil for Life. The | magazine will let you see the esult ai couple of months hence.) Fields, back on’ the road to health | and traveling fast, likes playing Mar- tins and Coys with Charley. He re- gards it as tilting with a kind of windmill on extremely profitable terms. | On the whole it has been the most |, successful venture of his long career | in convulsing the citizenry. It is| hard work, though; might hard.| Bometimes Charley seems almost too wily a foeman. Especially for a re- eently sick man who has to take time out every few minutes to dislike the | medical profession for that $12,000 doctor’s bill; and to dislike courts for | having approved it. | Fields, though, would not give it up for anything. He is one ex-Broad- | yayite who would not go back for | enything. | * % ¥ X "LOOK"' he says, “with Paramount | and on the radio I play to a| larger audience in one day than I| ocould in 20 years on the stage. What | we want in this business is an “dl'i ence. Pictures and the radio give me that. | “Besides, I like it out here (with | the understanding, of course, that that | does not go for the lscal medical as- | €ociation). All those years of playing | to audiences gave me claustrophobia. ITm afraid of shut-in places and| crowds.” If he is, he has found a grand hide- eway from them. His house sits high | on a hill from which you look down | upon mile after mile of bungalows and 8 complete explanation of why taxi| drivers are the richest people in Los | Angeles One thing that enormously pleases Pields with his current radio venture— he was the last comedian to come to | t—is that he has dared defy the taboo | on allusions to liquor. The very per- sons who were supposed to disapprove | have been the first to grab their best stationery to congratulate the come- | dian, “You see, I kid liquor,” says Pields. ‘We did not know how it would 8O, but it went.” “Why not?” some one wanted to| know. “After all, you and the W. C. T. U. have the same first initials?” “That,” says Fields, “is good. I shall use it in next Sunday's pro- €gram.” (Not having a portable radio get, we never shall know, but Fields made a note of it on the script in front of him.) Fields has not made a picture since his illness several months ago. He is Teady to step back into action any time, however. He is looking forward, from the perspective of a man with a much wider audience than ever before, to his part in “The Big Broadcast of 1938.” It goes into production at| Paramount on September 7. So does | Fields. The conversation was interrupted at that point by Benton'’s announce- ment that he had finished. “Marvelous,” said Fields, looking at | the astonishing results of Benton's 15 minutes of lightning sketching. L Wish I could do that. I used to draw, Yyou know. Bum cartoons. Your pic- ture, I think, gives me the best of it. T'd be the last person in the world to quarrel about that.” The impression -that you get in a talk with Fields that comedians must be the easiest persons in pictures to work with is substantiated by every one out here, especially directors. One of the persons with whom we can't stop talking at M-G-M is Sam Wood., He is the chap whoglirects the Marx brothers, and since we have been un- able to find a single brother, we have taken out our curiosity on Wood. “They're fine to work with,” he says. “For weeks before the picture starts they drive you crazy wanting to know when you can begin shooting. Then the day you start they all want to know if they can have the next day off to go to the races. There is no art, wile, subterfuge they won't use to cajole you into letting them 0. But they don't go, not even the —_— e SPECIAL TRIP.. 5. S. POTOMAC Children Adults 35¢ « 75e @ The trip of the season for the family! ® 140-mile water trip—swimming —pleniein; y outdoors! .—Back at 7:30 p. m. MOONLIGHTS NIGHTLY Ly. 8:45—Return 1 Free dancing—Beer Sun. & Hol ® FREE PARKING o Phone NAt, 7722 ¥TH & WATER STS. 8. W. of here, you can find the putty-nosed Puck who currently is the big- Ace Comic Admiring out on the hills to the west (we think) W. C. Fields is the name on the mail ing trick of nature, W. C. Fields is the Every afternoon he sits there h which to carry on the most profitable day after they have done two days’ THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, YOURSELF, MR.FIELDS, REMEMRER TH work in one. They really are among the hardest, fastest workers in pic- tures. They love it. You love it, too. Even those moments when they de- scend upon you as one madman in- sisting that they be allowed to go to the races.” Over at Twent-Cent-Fox (the locals have those words for it) the Ritz brothers have the same reputation. They may wreck the building or maim their fellow players in their exuberance, but it all is in a spirit of fun, very -frequently clean. * ok ox % VlGNETTES. Norman Foster, the actor-writer-director at Fox, admitting that he likes nothing better than a neatly turned panning of his work . . . And nothing less than a | personal jibe that is badly done . . . Reels off examples of both which show that he knows what he is talking about . . . Sitting across the tahle from Adolph Zukor, C. B. De Mille and Mrs, De Mille at the luncheon marking De Mille's 25th anniversary in pictures . , . Hearing Mrs. De Mille admit that it is pretty difficult to run a home on schedule for a husband who figures 24 hours a day far too few in which to get one's work done . . . Watching Franceska Gall eat daintily and agreeing with every word one hears about her being one of the great figures of pictures in the next year . Miss Gail and Fredric | March are very gay about cutting the De Mille cake, which they do not get & chance to eat because they have to run back to work on “Buccanneer.” The cake was delicious, they ought to be told . . . High light of the premiere of “High, Wide and Hand- some” by Paramount was the effort of Rufus Blair to give away a pair of passes to a couple of wide-eyed kids in the front line of spectators. The kids thought they were phoney, so did the cops nearby ... Mr. Blair finally told them all where they could go . . . Ben Blue, who is in the picture and who is an old Washington boy he wants you to know, sits beside you and wants to know very much what you think of the picture . . . You could have told him except that Marsha Hunt walked by at the time with Robert Fender and there was nothing to do but run over and tell her how | enchanting she looked. Handsomer | than the Federal triangle? she wanted | to know . . . Gene Towne, who forgot to have a swimming pool, gave a swimming party the other day . . .| e neglected to mention the lack of a pool until the guests all were dressed for . . . As a substitute he had | the hose turned on them . .. Paul| Schwegler, who used to play a lot of | All-American foot ball at Washington State, knew Towne well enough not to bother about the swim . . . He found more fun beating every one p]nymgi billiards. . Barrett Kiesling, who has an ocean in his yard, gave a real swim- ming party the next day, however . , . A scad of visiting cri‘ics and Capt. Lawrence J. Carr, of the Army Air Corps, were there KINDLER B ROADCASTS National Symphony Conductor on Columbia Programs. Dr. Hans Kindler, conductor of the National Symphony Orchestra, Who has been in Hollywood conduct- ing concerts at Hollywood Bowl, will 80 to New York 1o conduct two nationally broadcast radio programs. The ‘Washington conductor is to conduct the Everybody’s Music Broad- cast over Columbia from 2 to 3 p.m. Sunday, August 22. He is also to ap- pear in Columbia's Guest Conductor series with the Columbia Concert Orchestra tomorrow from 7 to 8 p.m, . Martell an Architect. Alphonse Martell, who plays the hairdresser in “Tonight's Our Night” and who has been an actor and di- rector for 15 years, was once a famous French architect. . Learns Cymballum. Anita Louise, Warner Bros. :.ar, al- ready an accomplished harpist, is learning to play the cymballum, the most difficult of all stringed instru- ments. THEATRE PARKING SPM.TO 38, 1AM. CAPITAL GARAGE 33203, & TERRACE DANCING Ave. 14th DESK,FINDS THE GOING A LITTLE ROUGH IN TRVING TO HANDLE THE McCARTHY SITUATION | 0SE DOCTORS' BILLS / D. C, WEDNESDAY, Where and When Current Theater Attractions| and Time of Showing. Earle—"Mr. Dodd Takes th: Air,” a new mad comedy by the fellow who| wrote “Mr. Deeds”: 11 am., 1:35, 4:25, 7:15 and 10 p.m. Stage shows: 12:45, 3:25, 6:20 and 9:10 p.m. Capitol—“You Can't Have Every- thing,” bright musical with a lot of Rite madness: 11 am., 1:40, 4:25, 7:05 and 9:50 p.m. Stage shows: 12:55, 3:35, 6:20 and 9 p.m. Keith's—"The Toast of New York.” Jim Fisk makes and loses millions: 11:35 a.m,, 2, 4:30. 6:55 and 9:25 p.m. “March of Time": 11:15 ~.m. 1:40,| 4:10, 6:35 and 9:05 p.m. Palace—"The Good Earth,” superb translation of Pearl Buck's novel to| the screen: 11 a.m., 1:35, 4:10, 6:45 and 9:30 pm. Metropolitan—“Marry the Girl,"” farce on a slightly insane plane: 11:50 am, 1:50, 3:50, 5:50, 7:50 and 9:50 p.m. Columbia—"Saratoga,” Jean Har- low’s last picture: 11:40 a.m., 1:40, 3:45, 5:45, 7:45 and 9:45 p.m. Trans-Lux—News and shorts. Show runs 1 hour and 15 minutes, continuous from 10 a.m. until midnight. Rialto—"The Man Who Could Work Miracles,” Roland Young has fun in| an H. G. Wells’ thesis on society: 11:20 | am, 1:25, 3:25, 5:30, 7:40 and 9:(51 pm. Little—"Rose Marie,” revival of the | popular MacDonald-Eddy musical: 11 | am, 1:05, 3:15, 5:25, 7:30 and 9:40 pm. Ambassador—"The Emperor’s Can- dlesticks,” spies, intrigue and ro- mance: 6:15, 8 and 9:55 p.m. | Sheridan—"The Emperor's Candle- | sticks”: 2, 3:55, 5:55, 7:50 and 9:50 pm. Tivoli—"A Day at the Races,” the mad Marxes at their maddest: 1:30, 3:30, 5:30, 7:30 and 9:35 p.m. Uptown—"The Emperor's Candle- sticks”: 2, 3:55, 5:45, 7:40 and 9:40 pm. Roadside—“The Haunted Mill,” an- other old-time melodrama is brought to life: 8:30 p.m. | ACADEMY ©! Perfect Sounu Photepiay 8th at G S.E E. Lawrence Phillips' Theatre Beautiful Continuous From 4:10 P.M NORMA SHEARER and LESLIE HOWARD, “ROMEO AND JULIET.” CONRAD NAGEL and ELEANOR HUNT in “BANK ALARM. CAROLINA " and N. C. Ave. SE. Air-Conditioned. “THEY GAVE HIM A GUN.” and “T! WANTED TO MARRY CIRCLE Bgme of Mirrophonic Seund. Penna Ave at 21st St. GENE RAYMOND and ANN SOTHERN in “THERE GOES MY GIRL.” Comedy. Major_Bowes. DUMBARTON 1313 wisconsta ave. SPENCER TRACY. LIONEL BARRYMORE in “"CAPT. GEOUS. "AINS COURA Comedy. FAIRLAWN ANACOSTIA. D C. LAUREL WEST. 3221 M_St. Air-Conditioned nd HARDY in “WAY OUT LIDO vl Double Feature 4 “THE MAN WHO FOUND HIVMSELF.' JOHN BEALE and JOAN AINE, and “RHYTHM IN THE CLOUDS. TTLE AlrSConditioned. NELSON EDDY and JEANNETTE MacDONALD in “ROSE MARIE.” PRINCESS *hnn s N.E. Double Feature ROBERT A MONTGOMERY in “NIGHT FALL CONRAD NAGEL in Dinner. $200. Sot, 32.25 Cover, 55¢. Sar & Hol, 5110 [No Additional Cover fur Dinner Guests| _DANCING. BE A CONFIDENT DANCER Learn the newest steps taught by Ethel M. Pistere. formerly with Arthur Murray. GY KELLY SCHOOL OF_ DANCE ST. 9888 PE( Studio 1018 18th St. 8244 Georria Ave. Silver Spring, Md. SECO : Continuous From 6:00 P.M “PERSONAL PROPERTY,” ROBERT TAYLOR and JEAN HARLOW. SYLVAN CAST SCORES IN FIRST MELODRAMA Scenery of the Late 80s Embellish Langley Lambs Club's Presen- tation of “The Drunkard.” SYLVAN THEATER resounded with boos and huzzas last night. With good reason, though, for Squire Cribbs was about his evil ways again to plague the Middleton family and poor Ed-ward, but ultimately to come to his deserved end through the aid of Ed-ward's righteousness and his friends tried and true. “The Drunk- ard.” first mellerdrammy ever to fall in the laps of Sylvan customers, held | its temperant sway over an immensely satisfied crowd which populated the Monument lawn in solid ranks. Forney Reese, directing the Langley Lambs Club through its eloquent paces, certainly had an eye for large- scale production. The show barely fell short of being a panorama of the late 80s, boasting horse-drawn trolleys, tandems, floradoras and cos- tumery to make grandma sigh with memories. Songs dusty with age were warbled in specialty fashion at the slightest provocation, and even the audience was carolling at closing time. But the drama. There were thrills every minute as the squire slunk here and there confounding good people, tormenting the distressed and lurinig upright Edward Middleton to drink and ruination of all those of his bu-lessed family. And how benevo- lent Arden Rencelaw, with the just| efforts of William, caught the vile On the Bay—Free Parking sw | M Salt Water. 40¢ Pool or Bay ADULTS. CHILDREN, 15¢ Frequent Bus Service From 403 11th Street N. W. For _Information Call NAt. 0213, W. M. & A, Motor Lines, Inc. Passenger and Freight Service S | AMBASSADOR &' & 455 WILLIAM_POWELL. LU RAINER _in "EMPEROR'S CANDLESTIC! APOLLO o550 "l WILLIAM POWELL, LUISE_RAIN] in PEROR'S CANDLESTICKS AVALON 52 g nn. Ave. N.W Clev. 2600 JOE PENNER. HARRIET HILLIARD in_“NEW_FACES OF 1937.’ AVENUE GRAND %3 t*At S.E. Li. 2406 WALLACE BEERY in “GOOD OLD SOAK.” Also_Short_Subject. m[, 425 Ninth St. N.W. Phone Met. 2841 Brought Back by Popular Demand. t gageme IOV AR BABLE, WiL- K IAM POWELL in “MANHATTAN DRA 1s0_8he CALVERT = fiiree Matinee. 2:00 P.M. MARION DAVIES. ROBERT M GOMERY_in "EVER_SINCE_E! 493 1230 C St A Phone Linc. 10208 KAY FRANCIS. ERROL FLYNN in “ANOTHER DAWN."" _Short Matinee. A BROTHERS, MAUREEN O'SULLIVAN in “A DAY AT THE RACES” News. 3030 14th &t N.W EFRANCHOT S GEORGE, GL’FODI},E S‘gENCER TRACY in “THEY GAVE HIM A | Jod Cartoon, SHERIDAN Ave. & Sheridan ee, Ran. 2400 in_“EMPEROR'S " PM. ALLAN JONES, WARNER BROS. THEATERS STANTON 6th and C Sts. N.E. Finest Sound Eauipment. Continuous From 5:30 P.M. CHARLES BOYER_and JEAN ARTHUR in ry Is Made at Night,” 0 CAPRILLO and COTTN CLIVE T FOUGH TO HANDLE ™ | With FRANKIE DARRO. KANE RICHMOND. 4th and Butternut Sts, TAKOMAMN No Eaeine Froubies “FIFTY ROADS TO TOWN.” VICTOR _MOORE in A School With a Natlonal Reputation.” (Over 10,000 puplis in U5y " Don Martini Studios Those who dance interestingly mever, worry about their vopularity, "CC waltz, foxtrot, tango, rumba, tap. Ten Patient Talented Tenchers Beginners Advanced: Air-Conditioned! 1811 H St. N.W. “Don_Martini_conduct: Private Lessons Low Rates! Nat. 3767 this_branch.” WHAT FUN TO LEARN to DANCE ot Leroy H. Thayer’s NOT only good fun—good exer- cise. You'll,acquire new poise, new confidence in yourself. And you'll learn all the newest, smartest donce steps—the rumbo, tango, latest fox-frot. Come in. Meet the populor Leroy H. Thayer in- structors. Call for a guest lesson, without obligation. Studios open daily from 10 to 10 LEROY H. THAYER “Make Way for Tomorrow.” ve, STATE-RETHFSDA 4020 %0 fve ROBERT TAYLOR and BARBARA STANWYCK in “THIS IS MY AFFAIR.” Travelogue and News. HIPPODROMF o, v% th Double Feature Warner Baxter. “Prisoner of Shark Ny Jane Darwell, “Laugh- . LUISE RAINER, ANDLESTICKS." th St. & Phone Park Rd. N.W Col. 18 Do RROTHERS. ALLA MAUREEN O SULLIVAN _AT THE RACES."_New UPTOWN &"tw'® iQL N.Vlr WILLIAM POWELL, "LOTSE RAINER in “EMPEROR § CANDLESTICKS." in “A DAY Ga. Ave. and Quebec Place N.W. Col. 4818 KAY FRANCIS. ERROL FLYNN in UANOTHER DAWN.” March of Time it 5 & Newton Sts. N. NEWTON 2> & Nevior, St “Captains Courageous,” BARTHOLOMEW and ’Rm?srgsrlc:n TRACY. JESSE THEATER™®2,* iy=e Carrier Air-Conditioned Double Feature. “A DOCTOR’S DIARY,” ROCHELLE HUDSON. ROBT. KENT. ing_at Troubl i RAINIER. _MD. CAMEO Today-Tomor.-Fri. F. BARTHOLOMEW and SPENCER TRACY in _“Captains Courageous.” ARCADF BYATTSVILLE. MD. Today-Tomor. Wm. Powell and Luise Rainer in ‘Emperor’s Candlestic R ALEXANDRIA. VA. R CHMOND e Stuttering Bish REED Atexancmia va. Edward Arnold Betty Furness in ‘Fair 1215 Conn. Ave. MEr. 4121 DIRECTION OF SIDNEY LUST AIR-CONDITIONED. Froe Parking.. i { A SYLVAN &2ie? -Conantonsy Air-Conditioned “NIGHT MUST FALL.” ROBT. MONTGOMERY. R. THEATER PELRAT P A TR rustd BOB BURNS. MARTHA RAYE. ARLINCTON, VA, 11 0°p; Celopin VEHE G BERNHEIMER’S DICK MARINE." Clarendon, Va. “MANHATTAN MA." popha T MR FALLS CHURCH, VA. STATE _ "%JeRie MERE b caven |7 BARTEOLOMEW SINCE EVE." % ”~ b Cribbs in the act of forgery to re- garnish the fair name of Middleton. Paul Taylor (villain to you) drew admirable quantities of hisses. Larry Lawrence (hero) and Kathryn Deng- ler (dear wife) upheld the supply of | approval justly extended. Ben Smart, in succoring William, received his share of approbation, and his sister, gentle Julia, because she discovered the papers to further denounce the evil one, rated high in public esteem. Keynoters, too, were Willlam Draper as the philanthropist and Jane Law- rence as Wife Mary's little lamb. The whole cast down to the lowest barfly was well equipped and really had fun, as the saying has it. That closing “Home, Sweet Home" tableau, resembling a tintype of some old- home week, was a minor sensation. Ray Baine and Alice Brennan were present to give the song and dance & twirl, and they proved most popular. Abetting alternately at the piano were | Kathryn Lawrence and Estelle Went- worth. The sound effects man sound- ed off to good effect. The Washing- ton Gas Light Co. Band serenaded before curtain time in the tenth pro- gram here under auspices of the Com- munity Center Department and Na- tional Capital Parks Office, which would apparently further establish its favor by presenting another “meller” | before long. —J. 8. Seven Languages. Morris Carnovsky, distinguished stage actor, now playing at Warner Bros., speaks seven foreign languages including Chinese, T AUGUST 18, 1937. Remarque’s “Comrades” To Get Big Name Cast Taylor and Tracy Chosen, With Joan Craw- ford Considered for Role—‘“Marie Antoinette” Held Up. BY SHEILAH GRAHAM. OLLYWOOD, August 18 (N.A.N.A.).—The era When one star could carry a picture alone has departed for good. H name on the lot that happens epic. of the three comrades. The third will be either Jimmy Stewart or Robert Montgom= ery. The story, by Eric Remar- que, adapted for the screen by R. C. Sherrift (of “Journey's End” fame), and cur- rently the script child of B8cott Fitzgerald, con- cerns the 1928 depression period in Germany, when courage and weelth were at a very low point, Miss Craw- ford’s role is that of an impoverished half-English German aristocrat. Pro- | duction begins when Robert Taylor | returns from his “A Yank at Ox- ford” jaunt in England. The wigs are ready, the costumes prepared, the script complete, but “Marie Antoinette,” in which Norma Shearer had hoped to make her first appearance on the screen since the | death of Husband Irving Thalberg, is still waiting to get before the cameras. There are two reasons for the delay. One, Miss Shearer is very anxious to have Charles Laugh- ton play Louis XVI, and, as Laugh- ton refused to journey Hollywood- wards, had planned to bring the mountain to Mohammet by making the film in London. But now Metro Sheilah Graham. has decided against making the film | abroad. Charles Boyer, next in line for the role, has turned it down in favor of a vacation in his native France. And so Miss Shearer's next film is likely to be “Pride and Pre- judice,” or a modern comedy. “The Four Mar;s," by Fenny Particularly at M-G-M, superwriting are under way for “The Three Comrades.” Joan Crawford is being considered for the leading feminine Taylor and Spencer Tracy play twoe OPENING TONIGHT AND THROUGH SATURDAY AT CROSS ROADS THEATER BAILEY'S CROSS ROADS, VA. “The Late Christopher Bean” ALL__SEATS, A5c. ON_ SALE AT BOX OFFICE. FREE PARKING STARTS AT LOEW’S FRIDAY PALACE AMUSEME Nowadays, every big to be available is crammed into aech where the tops in supercasting and part. Robert Heaslip Lea, starts production next week. The cast included Myrna Loy, Rosalind Russell, Franchot Tone and Melvyn Douglas. The two missing Marys will be chosen after the pic- ture gets under way. The story begins with the first Mary, a great-grand- mother. Mary number two is the mother of the third Mary, a divorcee who works as & book reviewer. The last Mary is a spoiled modern. Potted notes of the week . . . Ginger Rogers finally has been chosen to star | in ‘Having Wonderful Time.” But not | T oL NEW YO8 OAND “The MARCH of TIME" . Startng Fridey 0SA JONNSON MARTIN JOHNSON'S Lst picrare. “BORNEO” You'll see things you've never seen before THEATRE TRANS.LUX %4/ NEWS — HOLLYWOOD s VENICE—CARTOON sewss SHORT SUBJECTS SHECTED NOW PLAYING ollnel Youneg H.G.WEI‘I:S' COMEDY NTS. until she completes “Vivacious Lady| which resumes in three weeks, wh Ginger returns from her Canadian v cation . .. Mitzi Green's first starri picture in Hoflywood will be “Fidd) sticks,” with music by Brown a Henderson. Mitzi reports October after the closing of “Babes in Arms (Copyright, 1037, by the North Americas Newspaper Alliance, Ine.) WARNER BROS, EARLE M. Deed's Puraled Brofher “MR. DODD TAKES THE A" Frank McHugh — Nice Brady 25 TO 1 P. M. METRGPOLITAN LAST 2 DAYS “MARRY THE GIRL” Warnsr Brot Comady wnth WUGH HERBERT Mary Boland Frank McHugh« Carol Hughes 1 Aen Jenkins « Mischa Auer . 3 Frida, T Knaing Mystyy T THE GREAT GAWgiy AKIM ThmiRgry o Tnt Marsh MAT 25 -£VE 25 8 40c L CAPITOL L350 ME.S001 Uow LAST 2 DAYS ‘You NTHAVE EVERIHIN ALICE FAYE - The RITZ BROTHERS DON AMECHE + CHAS. WINNINGER RS Jimmy DORSEY ... Orchestr Stanzs FRIDAY Entertaimment the s For every mem ser of the fam 'y RUDYARD KIPLINC'S ”/””E’l Shirley TEMPLE « Victor McLAGLEN Plus ON $TAGE ———— "GOING NATIVE" ALL LOCAL REVUE with a CAST OF 60 WAN WHO oy :‘\{\afll Illlmf/g 729 ALEXANDER KORDA production "THRONE OF THE GODS Narration by LOWELL THOMAS A THRILLING TREK TO THE TOP OF.THE WORLD. OmMZO~A~TZOA HURR “THE Y—LAST 2 DAYS GOOD EARTH"” Paul Muni—Luise Rainer