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Show "GOLD RUSHAISIE" STARTS AT ISIS THEATRE FRIDAY Ann Sothern and Lee Bowman, aided and abetted by Slim Sum-merville Sum-merville and Virginia Weidler, provide some of the season's most hilarious and heart-warming comedy com-edy in "Gold Rush Masie," third in the popular series dealing with the adventures of the stranded showgirl, which opens at the Isis theatre Friday, September 20. Miss Sothern was never in finer fettle with her wisecracks and timely homilies than in the Arizona Ari-zona desert setting in which this latest adventure finds her. En route to cafe-singing job in a small Arizona town, he,r jallopy breaks down and leaves her adrift on the desert. Lee Bowman as BillAn-ders, BillAn-ders, young ranch owner, comes to her rescue but withdraws his welcome wel-come when she dodges his advanc es. His misogynist hired hand, played by Summerville, disapproves of women's influence around the home, anyway, and bolh he and Bowman disapprove more than ever when Maisie returns with a whole family of itinerant crop-followers who have turned gold prospectors. pros-pectors. Turning in individual gems of portrayals are John Hamilton as Bert Davis, Jubilee's father; Mary Nash as the mother; Scotty Beckett Beck-ett as Harold, the young son, and even Baby Quintanilla as the youngest of the family; Charles Judels as the unfeeling cafe owner; Wallace Reid, Jr., and Victor Kili-an, Kili-an, Jr., as two young prospectors. 14,394 army and 4,028 navy planes, which will bring the total number of aircraft now on hand' or appro, priated for, to about 35,000. x. The house adopted the conference confer-ence report September 11 on a bill to make unlawful the transportation transporta-tion of convict-made goods in interstate in-terstate commetrce. The original house bill provided exemption for farm machinery and binder twine, which were not exempted in the senate bill. The conference agreement agree-ment eliminates such exemptions, so far as shipment outside of states wherein prions manufacture such 'commodities. |