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Show 5rsa.l1 MlII-.S ()f A .NkWhPAI'hK MAN: Hil la Ihr. Ulr. ot Hollywood k-l ihot, whoir relatives and whose w.f'r s fj.ira utes dcacenrl-d In droves when the gold started to pour In J . Lucille Johnson, the thrush, who tells It. says they stayed and fayed and sLiyed and stayed and s'ayed . . . One day, however, one kunrian, who had been living oT J the r,,,ir for seven years, up and and they gave him a fancy i fun.-r.il . . . Returning from the ceo.-t.-ry, the wife tried to Console her tooofi, who was very fi'-oressed ' . . . "Af'.-r all, honey." she cooed, "your unrle was a pretty old man" . "My unele7" he screamed, "I thooi;ht he was your uncle!" liuentln Reynolds, who recently returru-d from the London bombings and hhtes, was speeding to a re- hearal for his engagement at the Strand theater. A cop stopped him. . . . "Where you going?" he asked, "to a Ore?" "Nope." said Quent, "I've Just returned re-turned from one." Ouldj Acquaintance Dep't: Thirty-three Thirty-three years ago Billy Kvans of the song and dance team of Evans and White, got Madeline Rumilo her first stage job dancing in a vaudeville unit ot the request of her father, a vet trouper . . . Evans it was who held her hand (she was 13 at the time and wore long dresses to fool the Gerry society) before she made her first entrance. And Evans It Is, who greets her each evening at the Broadhurst theater, where he is backstage door-mun door-mun for Ed Wynn's hit ("Boys and Glrla Together") and where little Madeline RufTolo is wardrobe mistress. mis-tress. Here Is an example of the Nazi method to frighten Americans. . . A Chicago paper the other day carried car-ried this ad in its amusement ad columns: "Little German Theatre-Exclusive Theatre-Exclusive First Showing of 'Blitzkrieg 'Blitz-krieg Im Westen' Time 'Maenjdnp says Americans who see this film will get an Inkling of what sort of national war eflort by the United States would be necessary to face the German army or to help Britain to do so." The Daily Worker's review on that show is almost as hilarious as the hit . . . The Communist organ's reviewer re-viewer reported: "Theodore Roosevelt's Roose-velt's pomposity always needed a bit of dellating, and this play does the trick." The dope.. He refers to John Alexander, Al-exander, one of the dim-witted members of the family In the play who isn't T. R. He just thinks he is! Enrlca Soma is II years old. Her folks own Tony's Wife, a West Fifty-second Fifty-second street joynt ... In the current cur-rent issue of Stage, the 11-year-old Ennca is the author of a drama criticism . . . Tony was boasting of her genius . . . "We knew." he said. she had the makings of a cntic when she was six-because she always walked out when her older sister started doing recitations." recita-tions." MAN ABOIT TOWN Earl Browder's lawyers sent Am-org Am-org a bill for $10,000 for defending the No. 1 Commy ... They got a SI r, P'US a check 'or JI5.000. . . President Camacho will send his brother to Washington ambassador in mid-Feb. Camacho has cancelled his planned visit to the "!.... Dewey's office is so busy-several assistants h.ve been summoned home from Florida holi- to1LKLK,"Jon Da"y Mal1 ryin r,.g:ie.home om t PersJade ,, ; r 10 noD here on a good-".U good-".U fl.eht? . . . Hurray for the sug. Stion in that letter-to-the-editor is now ehg.ble for the draft. Why doesn t he enlist?" y trZ3T'er.B wa expelled from the Commy part. beca p gabbed too much while drinking sas "fra.. which he does often The fan Grace Moore took on ihe ChTPrnC;lflTOrcTarhee n ' ra Goldwyn's latest- f.l0t anybody for nothing-Z?;?' nothing-Z?;?' advert: written bv M-j. ff" , T"e5" were and Rubicam KeJrccn of Voung ! The " T. Times his m,;t viewing fore-n , qint re-FrenchrU re-FrenchrU D :-.xcept . .travel bureau: -v 1. fa ! a wag aided- "ner I t-e Greek ar-j-.-, "" B- lomxg j o no constr I therside. r-e r -,"k , S on ei" ! Ti'-e threatened pay' ! fce &iv delayed WiU |