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Show FIRMAGEJJEATIE Sunday and Mondaj Romantic complications as well as a murder mystery further tangle the adventures of Red Skelton when he appears as Wally Benton, "The Fox", in M-G-M'"s "Whistling in Brooklyn," coming to the Firmage theatre Sunday and Monday. Ann Rutherford and Jean Rogers are the girls who make life complicated for Red when a beautiful reporter appears on the scene to cover Red's marriage mar-riage to Ann and decides to annex Red herself. The action of the story takes place in Brooklyn. The latest news, a cartoon and a special travelogue, of Utah, "Salt Lake Diversions", also will be shown. Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday M-iG-M's "The White Cliffs of Dover", which comes to the Firmage Fir-mage theatre Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, is a powerful love story which spans the years of World War I and World War II. The cast includes Irene Dunne, Alan Marshal, Frank Morgan, Roddy McDowall, Peter Lawrence and others. As an American visitor visit-or in England Miss Dunne meets Mr. Marshal in England. They fall in love and after a brief courtship they marry. Their love is idyllic, but it is interrupted by the outbreak out-break of war. Marshal answers the call to arms and never gets a chance to see his son. Time passes quickly and another World War has interrupted many a peaceful home and fireside. Again Miss Dunne makes a sacrifice, this time sending her son off to combat against the Nazis. The latest nifs events also will be shown. Friday and Saturday As timely as today's headlines is the film, "Three Russian Girls", which comes to the Firmage thea tre Friday and Saturday as one of the pictures of a double feature show. Teamed for the first time are glamorous Anna Sten and Kent Smith, who are seen- in the roles of a fighting volunteer nurse and an American aviator, who find love in the midst of bombs and machine ma-chine gun bullets on the active Russian front. The other two Russian Rus-sian girls of the title are little Cathy Frye and Mimi Forsaythe. "Texas Masquerade," a Hopalong Cassidy series starring Bill Boyd, comes to the Firmage theatre Friday Fri-day and Saturday as the other picture pic-ture of the double feature show. As usual, Bill plays the adventurous adven-turous role of "Hoppy," who has a soft spot for anyone in distress and doesn't hesitate to risk his life in order to right a wrong. her chance ot absorbing" them ana" creating total hatred and almost total to-tal resistance. Now, when Japan has less capital and less skill to spare than ever before, she is making one great effort ef-fort at robbery to create capital for development along the lines she first planned, because the shipping shortage and her war needs dictate such a course. She has reversed, for instance, her traditional determination deter-mination not to industrialize Korea, but to keep it as a raw material base, and Korea now is being Industrialized Indus-trialized rapidly. Japan once again Is trying to win by flattery a people she has tried for five years to cow by force. What success she will have remains re-mains to be seen. |