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Show sex license indulged jn cunil the post-war period when yomn threw all inhibitions and roprcs-sions roprcs-sions to the winds and openly flouted all existing standards ot decency. Whether this is the correct interpretation and this new craze will soon die out, or whether a is a further manifestation of the world wide collapse ot morals feared by historians as a prelude to disaster is a question in which every thinking person is profoundly pro-foundly interested. "Mad Youth." which conies to the Ritz theatre Sunday andMon. day. is a study of the question of Jittcrmania. Featured in the cast are lovely Mary Ainslce, Hollywood's, newest glamour gin' Ray Hirsch and Palti Laccy, national na-tional jilterburg champions, ' ami many other interesting and famous fa-mous personalities. Attractions At The Theaters Secrets of counterfeiting are revealed in 'Code of the Secret Service," second of Warner Bros.' U. S. Secret Service series pictures pic-tures starring Ronald Reagan, coming to the Rivoli Tuesday. "Here they go again!" The Jones Family are off to Grand Canyon this time to inherit a gold mine, and what with Injun ghosts, fake geologists, bullets, bandits, and gun fights, they strike it rich in their richest vein of fun! It's their latest 20th Centuiy-Fox picture, "Quick Millions" and it is due Tuesday at the Rivoli theatre for a two-day two-day run. And to add to it all, they have the aid of Eddie Collins, Col-lins, the round little comedian of "Down on the Farm," to help them again in providing laughs for the customers. Jed Prouty, Spring Byington, Ken Howell, George Ernest, June Carlson, Florence Roberts and Billy Ma-han Ma-han are seen in their customary roles. The cast also includes Robert Rob-ert Shaw and Helen Erickson. "Find Livingstone!" Exactly 70 years ago this October Oc-tober 16th, James Gordon Bennett Ben-nett barked these words at his crack reporter, Henry M. Stanley. Stan-ley. It was apparently the most hopeless assignment in all journalism. jour-nalism. No one but a mad man would brave the terrors of unknown un-known Africa to hunt for a missionary-explorer from whom no word bad come in two years. How Stanley found Livingstone, Living-stone, how the world called the newspaperman "the most colossal colos-sal liar of his age," and how he later became the greatest hero of his era, is the story of the 20th Century-Fox picture, Darryl F. Zanuck's production of "Stanley "Stan-ley and Livingstone." It opens Sunday at the Rivoli theater, an important event for Springville and a notable occasion for all. Spencer Tracy, twice an Academy Acad-emy Award winner, portrays Stanley. Nancy Kelly, who rose into the front ranks of movie-town movie-town with her role in "Jesse James," and Richard Greene, who in a year's time has become one of Hollywood's top romantic stars, are starred with Tracy. Another two-time Award winner, Walter Brennan, heads the outstanding out-standing cast which includes Charles Coburn,, Sir Cedric Hard-wicke Hard-wicke (as Livingstone), Henry Hull and Henry Travers. Henry King, who directed "In Old Chicago," "Alexander's Ragtime Rag-time Band" and "Jesse James," was assigned the megaphone. Is America and the world headed' head-ed' for another world disaster'.' Scholars point out and history verifies their statements that the decay and disappearance of every great civilization from the dawn of time up to the conquest of Rome by Attila the Hun, was preceded by a tremendous wave of sexual, sensual dancing that seemed to grip entire populations. popula-tions. America at this moment, and the youth of America in particular, seems to be in the throes of a new mass hysteria known as Jittermania, which is merely a conglomeration of the maddest, most sensual bodily contortions con-tortions ever to masquerade under un-der the name of "dancing." Yet psychiatrists are not unduly un-duly alarmed as they take the stand that jitterbug dancing is really a new outlet for the nervous ner-vous energy of youth far preferable prefer-able to the heavy drinking and |