Indianapolis Times, Volume 48, Number 22, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 April 1936 — Page 4

PAGE 4

AL JOLSON S LATEST PICTURE BOOKED FOR INDIANA SCREEN

'The Singing Kid/ Starting Friday, Is to Bring Array of Film, Stage Favorites Cab Calloway and Orchestra Top List of Supporting Actors; Star of Production Raises Walnuts Between Jobs on Hollywood Lot. BY JOHN W. THOMPSON A1 Jolson s latent picture, ‘ The Singing Kid,” is to open Friday at the Indiana, It was announced today. In the film with Jolson are Cab Calloway and his band. Sybil Jason, the Yacht Club Boys, Edward Everett Horton, Allen Jenkins, Lyle Talbott, Claire Dodd and Al's new leading lady, Beverly Roberts. When Al, one of the busiest men in the show business, has time off, he operates a nut ranch. The ranch is located in Encino, Cal., where Al built a lovely home for Ruby Keeler, his wife, and their baby son. Sooon after Al came to town, Encino residents elected him mayor.

The nuts Al raises on his big farm are walnuts. There are oranges, flowers and vegetables, too, but most of them are given away. The nuts are the only thing commercialized. They axe wrapped in "Mammy” signature wrappers, sold everywhere. Wife Is His Cheek In his spare time Al also writes lyrics for songs. These he usually gives away. Those he sells, he receives royalty, and if Ruby doesn’t watch him he is likely to give that away, too- But don't get the idea Al is a dyed-in-the-wool philanthropist. He makes money, plenty of it. Warner Brothers, who employ him, say he is one of the toughest customers when it comes to salary bargaining. The Jolson home is furnished elaborately. There is the usual Hollywood swimming pool and golf course. But the place is Ruby’s domain and Al doesn’t interfere with the routine except when the baby is concerned. One. of his worst traits, according to Mrs. Jolson, is that of awakening their son too early in the morning. As soon as Ruby can get him away from the nursery, the two play their daily round of golf. It is Al’s prime ambition to beat SO on a fast course. He has come near to the mark, but never beaten it. He also wants to be a movie producer, with his own unit. He's supervisor at Warner Brothers now and from the looks of things he'll be a producer before he breaks that 80. Horses His Weakness If there is a race meet anywhere Rround, Al and Ruby probably will be found there. Horses are one of Als weaknesses. If the tracks aren’t open, then the couple may be found at a football or baseball game 01 a tennis match- Both are fond of sports. In the evenings, the Jolsons usually take in a prize fight or go on a "postman’s holiday” to a show. Al chews gum, smokes many cigarets but never drinks. He refuses to be left alone anywhere, has spells of moodiness. He never laughs at a joke, but if it’s funny enough he’ll buy it. His set at Warner Brothers is one of the few where visitors always are welcome. He likes to have people around when he's singing or acting.

Film Folk to Honor Rogers Week in May Is to Be Set Aside for Memorial. Time* Special NEW YORK, Apili b. Will Rogers memorial week is to be observed in May by motion picture theaters throughout, the country in honor of the beloved screen philosopher, according to plans announced by Will H. Havs, president of Motion Picture Producers and Distributors, All persons in and out of theater professions are urged to participate in the program, which will mark presentation of the Will Rogers Memorial Hospital at Saranac Lake in the Adirondacks. The hospital, formerly known as the N. V. A. Sanitarium and Lodge, has been presented to the Will Rogers Memorial Commission. It is to be dedicated to the service of those of Rogers’ profession who are ill and in need. Both the com"ission and many of Rogers’ friends Relieve that it is the type of memorial which would have been most pleasing to him. Fund to Be Raised Raising of money for use in maintenance of the hospital and for the general use of the commission is among the purposes of the May services, it was announced at the time of the acceptance of the hospital. No part of the money raised in the original campaign by the commission will be used in connection with the support of the hospital. Funds obtained from the memorial program, however, are to be used at the hospital and in the general fid to handicapped children. Maj. L. E. Thompson, president of * vaudeville circuit, is to be chairman of the campaign committee. Members of the memorial commission, the motion picture industry at large and intimate friends of Rogers are to assist. Actor to Attempt Dangerous Swim Timet Special HOLLYWOOD, April 6.—Erik Rhodes, who swam the 10 miles from Santa Monica to Malibu last summer, plans to attempt to swim the dangerous 15-miie stretch of the Balton Sea in Imperial Valley this month. This treacherous, brackish body of water never has been crossed by a awimmer. Lying 250 feet below sea level, the chappy waves whipped by desert winds and the bitter natures of the water make It one of the world’s severest swimming tests. The last man to attempt the feat gave up after nine hours in the water. The actor, wearing special goggles, hopes to make the swim in 10 or 12 hours.

Choir Presents Verdi Requiem Tabernacle Singers Praised for Performance. Hans Von Buelow's opprobrious description of the Verdi "Manzoni” Requiem as "an opera in ecclesiastical costume” doubtless is justified, but those who heard its performance by the Tabernacle Presbyterian | choir last night attest the popularity of the colorful and dramatic music. Its performance is no mean undertaking. but through the enterprise of the choir’s director, Fred Newell Morris, we were able Lo hear j the celebrated work for the second i time in two seasons. The four singers who essay the solo parts of this "mass for the dead” are confronted with the dual difficulties of opera and oratorio. The Tabernacle quartet members, however, delivered the taxing music in a highly creditable fashion. Three Soloists Repeat Three of the soloists. Mrs. Walter E. Wallace, soprano; Miss Patra M. Kennedy, mezzo-soprano, and Perry M. Rush, tenor, were heard in last year's performance, and again gavt an excellent account of themselves. The quartet’s newcomer, Alfred Halliday, enriched the ensemble with a voice of velvety texture, particularly in its upper register. Some of the soloists’ concerted numbers lacked freedom and flexibility, but the individual singing without exception was satisfying. The chorus is heard less in thus work than in the more conventional compositions of Catholic liturgy, but its effect was telling throughout. This especially was true in the closing number, "Libera Me,” which Verdi wrote as the last part of a memorial requiem by 13 composers i in memory of Rossini. “Libera Me” Impressive The mass was completed but never performed because of its uti-er lack of unity. The "Libera. Me” impresses us as the most sincere and effective portion of the mass, and incidentally reveals the inveterate melodist, Verdi, as an adept writer of contrapuntal music. Mr. Morris is to be; commended for his ambitious and worthwhile Lenten program, which included Mendelssohn’s “Christus” last week, and which is to conclude with the Easter portion of “The Messiah” next Sunday evening. Last night’s performance was capably assisted by Paul Matthews at the organ. (By J. T.}.

Miss O'Sullivan in Barrymore Picture Time* Special HOLLYWOOD. April 6.—Maureen O’Sullivan, who plays the. role of his son’s wife-to-be in ’’The Voice of Bugle Ann,” is to be Lionel Barrymore’s daughter in his new picture, "Witch of Timbuktu.” The picture is based on ’’Burn, Witch, Burn,” and was adapted for the screen by Richard Schayer and Garrett Fort. Miss O’Sullivan’s role is that of a girl grown up to hate her father, whom she thinks guilty of crime, and who feels free to marry only when, through a strange plot, he finally clears his name. Lawton Has Role in Mystery Film Time* Special HOLLYWOOD. April 6.—Frank Lawton, who played David Copperfield as a young man in the Charles Dickens classic, now is cast as Tito, juvenile male lead in the mystery of the Paris Surete, temporarily titled ’’Witch of Timbuktu.” Lionel Barrymore is to have the leading role. Mr. Lawton first gained attention on the English stage, played in ‘‘Cavalcade” and many other pictures.

WHERE. WHAT, WHEN APOLLO "A Connecticut Yankee.” starring Will Rogers. 11:36 1:36, 3:36, 5.36 7 36. 9 38. CIRCLE "■Walking Dead " with Boris Karloff, at 11:17, 2 4:45 7 30, 10 15. Also “Muss Bm Up.” with Preston Foster and Margaret Callahan, at 12:45, 3 30, 6:15. 9. INDIANA "13 Hours by Air." with Fred Mar Murray and Joan Bennett at 11. 1 50. 4 40, 7 30, 10:25. Also. "Too Many Parents.” with Frances Farmer and Lester Matthews, at 12:35. 3.25. 6:20, 9:10. KEITHS "The Barker," Kenyon Nichplson's famous play, directed bv Berkell, produced bv the Federal Player*, with Bernice Jenkins Jack Duval. Ned LeFevre. Batty Anne Brown, Ira B. Klein in the cast. LOEWS "The Garden Murder Case," with Fdmund Lowe and Virginia Bruce, at U. 1:1*. 3:35. 535. 1:10 Also, Don't Gamble on Love," with Ann Bothern, Bruce Cabot, at 12:09, 2.27. 4 45. 7:03. 9:20 LYRIC "The Voice of Bugle Ann.” on aereen with Lionel Barrvmotv and Maureen O'Sullivan, at 11 25 2:15, *OS 7:55. 10:35 "Paris on Parade,” on stage at 1:05 3 55. 6:45. 9.35.

Norma Shearer and Leslie Howard in 'Romeo and Juliet" Roles

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All Hollywood Signs Indicate Spring Is Back in Film Capital Mary Pickford Has New Gardening Gloves, Toby Wing Changes Boy Friends and Sports Fans Warm Up. BY PAUL HARRISON HOLLYWOOD, April 6. —(NEA)—lt’s spring in flickertown. Producers who haven't been on speaking terms are lunching together again. Song writers are peering through open windows and making maudlin rhymes about birds and bees and blossoms. Mary Pickford has bought

anew pair of gardening gloves. It’s spring in Hollywood, and the studio fashion designers are unrolling bolts of light, bright fabrics. Warner Baxter swears he's taking sulphur and molasses. You can detect a note of honest sympathy in the voices of casting office telephone girls as they drone: "Nothing today, sorry . . . nothing today . . . sorry, nothing today.” Shops for Trout Flies Fred Mac Murray is shopping for the latest things in trout flies, leaders and reels. Rochelle Hudson is refurnishing her house again, and Louis Hayward is taking swimming lessons. Joel McCrea has bought a hundred head of cattle for his ranch; and big, rough-and-ready, broken-nosed Victor McLaglen is budding the roses in his garden. It's spring in Hollywood, and the poppies have popped out all over the hills. Lewis Stone, Sir Guy Standing, James Cagney, Preston Foster and Stan Laurel—the yachting fans —are conning nautical magazines and ordering paint and canvas. Mary Boland, Ann Dvorak and Jeanette MacDonald are having their swimming pools reconditioned. Bathing Suits Scanty Shop windows are bright, with scanty items identified as the season's newest bathing suits. Frances Sage already is nursing a case of sunburn. Claire Trevor pursues the last vestige of winter in a tour of the Western national parks. Merle Oberon is learning how to flick a Royal Coachman across a trout pool. That new, big car with the top turned down belongs to Herbert Marshall. Katie Hepburn is trying to get her golf game back into the 70s. Eric Rhodes motors far into the hills each day, shopping for a ranch. Jim Williams, who draws "Out Our Way.” has fled the city in a fit of fidgets for his snug little 30.000acre cow yard in Arizona. And Jack Oakie Marries It must be spring; Jack Oakie got married. Bing Crosby and Dixie Lee are bossing the pruning and planting on their Rancho Santa Fe. Fat old gophers and their innumerable progeny are digging up the garden planted by W. C. Fields. AU. SEATS MPfMpWii SEATS ibwhriib I Today and Tomorrow Only! I James Cagney "Lady Killer” Ronald Caiman "Th* Man Wh* Broke the Bank of Monte Carlo” 1

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Friends of Wallace Beery are admiring a. six-door bus in which he plans to go touring. Toby Wing has anew boy friend. Waitresses in the studio cases have blossomed out in crisp, gay new uniforms and flutter their artificial eyelashes outrageously at the extra men. Shirley Temple’s white rabbits are anticipating a blessed event- Dour old studio gatemen are whistling at their posts; and swallows are nesting in the rafters of the least-used sound stages. Seat Takes Root A local fan sent Hugh Herbert a lawn seat fashioned of tree branches. He put in the garden and the darned thing has taken root v There's a baseball game every afternoon at the Joe E. Browns. Dick Powell and Joan Blondell are still in love—twee-twee, twatwa—and Kay Francis is trying to make up her mind about Delmer Daves, the writer, who may be her fifth. A1 Jolson’s 1-year-old son has made up a mammy song. Errol Flynn has decided to raise pigs. Swing music from the night clubs is audible far across the hills of a starry evening. And the trim little waitresses at the drive-in sandwich stands are switching from slacks to shorts. It's spring in Hollywood. / Directs Second Color Film In directing “Dancing Pirate,” new technicolor feature. Lloyd Corrigan becomes the first director with two full-color productions to his credit. He previously directed "La Cucuracha.” La-w School Graduate Ralph Morgan, currently appearing with William Powell in "The ExMrs. Bradford.” is a graduate of Columbia University Law School.

Here is the first official portrait of Norma Shearer and Leslie Howard as they appear in the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer production of Shakespeare's “Romeo and Juliet.” It was taken by Hurrell, special photographer for this pic-

Theatrical Hoax With Managers as Suckers" Gets Actor a Role Robert Cummings, 'So Red the Rose’ Lead, Played Best Part in Winning First Job. Timex Special , HOLLYWOOD. April fi. —Because they told him he couldn’t act and “wasn’t the. type” and that "he’d better forget about it,” Robert Cun - mings practiced an amazing deception to become an actor. His mother didn't want him to go ———

on the stage and his father insisted that he stick to mining engineering. At Carnegie Tech, though, he was cast in a play—D'Artagnan in “The Three Musketeers”—and the dramatics coach advised him to go on the stage. “Swell,” said Cummings. “You write my father and I’ll do it.” The letter was written and parental consent was won. European Demanded So he went to the American Academy of Dramatic Art, but on graduating he couldn’t even get into a producer's office. They wanted European juveniles. The hoax! He went to Europe, toured Scotland for a month, studied Englishmen and aped them before a mirror- Then he wrote letletters to New York producers, announcing the arrival of “Blade Stanhope Conway, young actor, author, IaTLAST 4 DAYS! %i /FRED MacMURRAYA f, JOAN BENNETT*! \I3HOURS Li/ Aim V with ZaSa Pitts II 1 j nuacAan cahahaw

ture. The film is to climax Loew's "spring parade.” coming here soon. It will mark the first appearance of Miss Shearer in almost a year and the last time Mr. Howard will be seen on the screen for several months.

manager of the English theater.” A bribe induced a theater attendant to put his name up in the marque of a theater. He took photographs of it and sent them to managers. Offers Were Plentiful With SIOO, one tailored English suit, and a stick he booked passage for New York in steerage. On arrival he found a flood of offers. He took one and landed a part in “The Roof.” He met an old friend. Margaret Kies, who hadn't been able to get in a producer's office either. He told her what he'd done. She tried it and as Margaret Lindsay she made the grade. Cummings has the principal role in “So Red the Rose.” Now he’s in “Forgotten Faces” and soon is to be in “Three Cheers for Love.” uraic’^sa Hf 4 Last Days! fRi HKrEV E_DK-MZO.V ■ . Rer t_\valto.v pPARU oh PARADE | Rf<a&2s‘6 [Ball pJSgI IJUji 11 rnvi|rTnjv; HERE THEV ACE FOLKS/THE SISIER ACT OF [T*S HIND IN THE paw 40 i*i conjunction wax our

Janet Gaynor Spares No Tears When Script Calls for Weeping in Her Role Demure Star of ‘Small Town Girl,’ Opening Friday at Loew’s, Reveals She Thinks of Sad Things to Make Her Emotion Genuine. To most Hollywood actresses, the command to weep before the camera means for them to appear, as nearly as possible, to be weeping. To little Janet Gaynor, whose latest film. "Small Town Girl," is to open Friday at Loew’s. such a command calls for more than acting. Noticing Miss Gaynor’s apparently real tears in a scene from the picture, Robert Taylor, her leading man in the film, asked her if she really felt emotion when she cries for movies.

"Well, yes and no,” Janet replied "I have a whole series of sad things to think about when I want to cry,” she confessed. “Sometimes I think about a situation in a novel I’ve read; the sadder the crying should be the sadder situation I try to think about. Remembers Her Dog “If that doesn't work. I think about my stepfather Jonesy, whom I loved dearly and who died just after I made ‘Seventh Heaven.’ Sometimes I think about a little puppy I had that was killed by an automobile.” "But what about the action taking place in the scene? Don’t these other things take your mind off your immediate work?” Mr. Taylor asked her. Janet smiled, scooted back among the pillows on her dressing room couch. "Once in a while that’s the case. If the scene is exceptionally emotional, often I am swept away with my own tragic situation and I cry without even trying. But it’s the duty of an actress to be able to weep at all times. So sometimes I have to be able to turn on the tears whether I feel like it or not. Must Save Emotion “The hardest lesson I had to learn in pictures was the trick of conserving emotion,” Miss Gaynor said, “for an emotional actress lives through more trying scenes in a week than the average woman experiences in a lifetime. “A long time ago I made a picture called ‘The Johnstown Flood.’ It was my first big screen chance and I was desperately eager for success. So I threw myself into every scene with all the emotion I could master. The result was a nervous breakdown before the picture was finished.” Often one may find Janet coiled up on her dressing room couch, occupied with her thoughts. Few have the courage to disturb her, but it is a safe guess that she ruminates over her long, hard quest in search of Hollywood laurelsStarted as Imitator Her mental scene probably shifts to an old-fashioned house in Philadelphia where a little, dark-eyed girl with long curls answered to tho name of Lollie and went through a series of imitations for her mother’s friends. "The child is a i born actress,” the whisperers said. From there Janet’s thoughts fake her to Chicago and Florida, whpre her imitations won her new friends and admirers. Then back to Chicago where, during the World War, she and her sister, Helen, gave recitations for the men in the Great Lakes Naval Training Station. Her big hit at these performances was a piece called "Kaiser Bill,” which inevitably brought call for an encore. * San Francisco was next, with It high school and a. job in a shoe store where she first worked as a stock girl, later promoted to making out the pay roll. Through all these years, Jonesy, her stepfather, constantly encouraged and advised the little star in her theatrical ventures. The fact that he died at the height of her success is one of her greatest sorrows. Next came Hollywood. Helen and IfIPITU’C PHONE LI. XVXL AA n 9 aoon TONIGHT AT *US Federal Players in “THE BARKER” NIGHTS—ISe, 25c, 40e SAT. MAT.—lOc, 20c, 30c NEXT WEEK—“DO UNTO OTHEKS'’

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WEST SIDE rp an n rm w in,b Sl - I A I K Doublr Feature 1 • rv 1 .lane Withers ••paddy o’day'* •‘EXCLUSIVE STORY" npi itW. Wash. Sc Belmont BELMONT R“v' "CAPTAIN BLOOD” "NEXT TIME WE LOVE" ry 4 | p 2540 W. Mich. St. DAISY l““; ?“7 “CEILING ZERO" "MUSIC IS MAGIC" NORTH SIDE Ri m rt Illinois at 34th 11/. Doable Feature 4 4 " George Raft “IT HAD TO HAPPEN” "HERE COMES TROUBLE" UPTOWN Und Sc College "BROADWAY MELODY OF 1936” Novelty—Cartoon—News GARRICK d Fe , K’ “ Joan Blondell "MISS PACIFIC FLEET” and Jean Harlow—"RlFF RAFF"’ pnn pi I . |TI St. Clair Sc Ft. Wayne ST. CLAIR “COLLEGIATE" "ANOTHER FACE” n 30. h at Northw't’n Kri.\ Double Feature 4V4 - //X Sylvia Sidney “MARY BURNS. FUGITIVE” "THE MAN WHO BROKE THE BANK AT MONTE CARLO” 1 rr I DATT Taibot Sc 22nd 1 ALBO 1 1 Doable Featare A l A A Wallace Beery "AH WILDERNESS” “FRESHMAN LOVE” STRATFORD ™£i : “RIFF RAFF” "BAR 20 RIDES AGAIN” Mp oA a Noble A Mast. EC C A ■>■>.;£ F..,.,. "MARY BURNS. FUGITIVE” "MOONLIGHT ON PARADE" run I? A 14 2361 Station SL DREAM Feature Irene Dunne "MAGNIFICENT OBSESSION” "HIS NIGHT Ot’T" EAST SIDE I RIVOLI B-l.'r.ir.'U V '/ 4 George Raft "IT BAD TO HAPPEN” "NEXT TIME WX LOVE”

.'APRIL 6, 1936

Jhnet spent weary days trudging from one studio to another in search of “extra" work. Whenever Helen managed to land a bit part she always tried to smuggle her little sister into the scene. After several such experiences Janet began to be noticed. She was put on regular "extra” call at the Hal Roach studio where so many Hollywood luminaries got their start. Path to Stardom One memorable day, Wesley Ruggles gave her a bit part in fcomedy starring Alberta Vaughn. Then Universal signed 1 eras leading lady for a western picture. The rest of .her story is familiar. "The Johnstown Flood,” "The Return of Peter Grimm” (silent version); "Sunrise” and then "Seventh Heaven” lifted the demure, brighteyed little girl to stardom- The fart that she's still there puzzles many. Not Janet, however. “Remember that line in ‘Seventh Heaven’?” she said. "The one about ‘always lookin’ up?’ That line became the first rule in my life. I wanted the part of Diane so dreadfully. I tried to be that girl, even before I knew the role was mine; kept looking up until it became a habit. Then I got the part, I still kept looking up. It’s much : lore fun than looking down, anyway.” Actors Devise Mental Tests Hollywood Colony Residents Face Quiz. 2'im.c* Special HOLLYWOOD, April 6.—An intelligence test has been devised for Hollywood by Joan Bennett and Cary Grant. A test submitted to a San Francisco judge, in which he received a mental rating of 12 years, suggested it. Their test, however, is a list of five questions strictly gags, and is for persons who are supposed to know their way around in the film colony. Walter Wanger and Raoul Walsh rated highest. This is the test: (1) What’s the difference between a signature and an autograph? (2) If somebody delivered an elephant to your house as an anonymous gift, whom would you blame? <3i Two feet make a yard. (4) No Parisian locale is complete without it. (5) What is the significance of the words "gone Hollywood?” The answers: (1) Signatures for bank checks; (2) Vince Barnett; (3) Arthur Treacher; (4) Shot of Eiffel Tower; (5> Sour grapes.

#LE ffSCSTESTSgjs, S. VAN DIKE’S “Garden Murder Case” I EDMUND LOWE VIRGINIA BRUCE “Don’t Gamble With low" I Ann Sothern —Brno Cabot^^B lANF.T ROBT. j GAYNOR TAYLOR 1 “Small Town Girl” j Pina: "Moonlight Murder”

EAST SIDE TIlVrnA 4020 E. New York TUXEDO S'; “STRIKE ME PINK" “THE MAN WHO BROKE THE BANK AT MONTE CARLO” rr\ /\(i a 2442 E. Wash. St IALIUMA Double feature w a Waliace Beery “AH WILDERNESS” "DANGEROUS" I r> V I V /"t 55,17 E - Wash. SL 1 K V I 1\ ll Double Feature t a xv VJ pat 0 - Brieß "CEILING ZERO” “PADDY O’DAY” nirnomi 4630 e. 10th st. EMERSON ESrgxs? “STRIKE ME PINK” “THE LADY CONSENTS” HAMILTON Double Feature lliUTlUVlVii Eddie Cantop “STRIKE ME PINK” "THE LADY CONSENTS” Pi t* 1/ pri 2936 E. 10th St. ARK h R Double is sv u s\ Katharine Hepburm “SYLVIA SCARLETT” "DANGEROUS” Srn n a V | r\ 1332 E. Wash. SL 1 KA IN D Doob'e Feature Eddie Cantor “STRIKE ME PINK” J“CASE OF THE MISSING MAN” Rf\ v v 3:21 rw * ,h - iT* ll A I Double Feature * Shirley Temple “LITTLEST REBEL” “CASE OF THE LUCKY LEGS.” Paramount “COLLEGIATE” "SHOW THEM NO MERCY” SOLTHSIDE FOUNTAIN SQUARE Doable Feature Ann Harding “THE LADY CONSENTS” “CALL OF THE PRAIRIE” _ n a Mrvrn O Fountain Sqnare SANDERS "gst/ar “EUKY NIGHT AT EIGHT” “WANDERER OF THE WASTELAND" Air a f ."v si Prospect-Churehmau VALON “SCARFACE” “MISS PACIFIC FLEET” ORIENTAL I, Vub.e M Via d {‘ur. Bt v ' ,4X44 -' i, 4 Ronald Colmau “A TALE OF TWO CITIES” "WHISPERING SMITH SPEAK” GARFIELD WSkT "RIPF RAFF" “IF YOU COULD ONLY COOK."