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Show FINE PICTURES e BOOKED HERE COMING WEEK p: The hilarious, slapstick comedy f 0f Beit Lahr, America's most imi-,r imi-,r t;iteU comedian, C'-iarlotlc Gren-wnod. Gren-wnod. PHt O'Brien and others in a- '"lying High." an M-G-M attrac-r. attrac-r. t:on which will open Sunday and v Monday at the Rivoli Theater for Je two days, is interspersed with a number of staking new songs. Thiee out of lour them were written by the most successful song-writing song-writing team of recent years, o Dorothy Fields, daughter of Lew c- Fields of Weber and Fields, and James McHugh. "The Blackbirds" established the reputation of Fields and McHug'a some years ago. Since then they have done numer-oris numer-oris other r.uccessfr.l musio! ;hows before entering the Pukic field. "Go Home and Tell Vour Mother." of "Love in the Rough," was one ; of their big song hits. Through the medium of Force and Will, a book on personality, Charley C'.iase presents two of his funniest reels at the Rivoli theater title of "The Panic is On." With this current depression situation all aiound us a man needs force and will, he units dominant, die master job of his soul, in order to make historyor even expenses. ; No position, not even a job. and ' three weohs in arrears with his room rent. Charley sends for the free booklet on Force and Will. The powerful words instil a domineering domi-neering instinct in Mr. Chase and ' so he sets forth to conquer the big ! business man and demand a posi-. posi-. ' lion. t One of the most enduring and popular stories the American stage j has known made its local talking ; picture debut last night at the . Rivoli Theater where it will be the attraction Friday and Saturday. It is "The Squaw Man," magnificently mag-nificently produced hy Cecil B. De-Mille De-Mille for Metro-Goldwin-Mayer. DeMille has assembled a vemark-nhle vemark-nhle cast for 'nis presentation of the fnmous Edwin Milton Royle play, nitcd with "Uncle Tom'.-i Cabin" b and "Ben Hur" among the first three most popular stage tales the U. S. A. has known. Time has not dimmed in any way public enjoyment of Lhis story, moving quickly between English castles and the Auizona cattle country. The action has been nod-ernized, nod-ernized, but the background is the same as in the past, a strong gripping melodrama with a conflict con-flict of felood ties, Indian and v.'-iite, that drips with "bo.; office" potentialities. |