'Mr. Smith' Proves Bang-Up Film Fare; Awarded Four Stars James Stewart and Jean Arthur Head Cast in Florida's Feature By MARION AITCHISON (Times Movie Reviewer) Presenting Mr. Smith and associates when "Mr. Smith Goes to Washington" by way of the Florida theater screen: Jefferson Smith (James Stewart), idealistic young innocent appointed to the senate, is thrown to the wolves of his local graft ring when he introduces a bill for a boys' camp which conflicts with a dam project. He is all bound round by graft, whose dangerous possibilities are realized oo late by Clarissa Saunders (Jean Arthur), his wise and disillusioned secretary who, deciding it's all too futile, walks out on him but returns to pick up the pieces and put them together just in time to prod him into a filibuster against Senior Senator Joseph Paine (Claude Rains), who once believed "lost causes were the only causes worth fighting for" but who finally, In the interests of personal progress, learned to compromise with Jim Taylor (Edward Arnold), who has a corrupt hold on most of the enterprises, private and political, in Smith's home state and who expends, every effort' through the papers and radio he controls to keep the boy's constituents from learning what he is trying to get across to them as he wears out quorum relays of senators under the sympathetic tolerance of The president of the senate (Harry Carey), who sees he gets a square deal while Diz Moore (Thomas Mitchell) "poet of the Washington press." sees that his confreres send out tUe right dispatches in spite of realizing that it's Smith, instead of himself, whom Saunders has fallen in love with. VMr. Smith Goes to Washing ton" is bang-up entertainment if we were one to scatter around stars we'd give it four of them. It is swiftly paced and bright with humor to balance its more serious "implications. James Stewart is, of course, an ideal selection for the wide-eyed director of the Boy Rangers and Jean Arthur is crisply efficient as the cynical veteran of many a Washington skirmish who pro duces a lot of moral support just in time. Of the supporting cast, both Claude Rains and Edward Arnold give splendid performances but we're of the opinion that Harry Carey as the vice president and Thomas Mitchell as the newsman make the most telling impression. A travel picture on Africa. Popeye cartoon, and newsreel complete the program, billed to remain through Tuesday. WPA Orchestra To Play in Park St. Petersburg WPA orchestra, a unit of the Florida music pro ject, sponsored by the state plan ning board, will present its weekly public concert in Williams park tomorrow at 7:30 p.m. A, B. Cintura will conduct. The pro gram follows: 1. March Military Tactics Rosey 2. Overture Hungarian Lustspiel Keler-Bela 3. Selection Maytime Romberg 4. Bandanna Sketches . . White (a) Nobody Knows the Trou ble I've Seen (b) Sometimes I feel like a Motherless Child 5. Concert Waltz Espana Walteufel 8. Mazurka and Czardas from Coppelia Delibes 7. Request The Bells of St. Mary's Adams 8. Humoresque The Donkey and the Driver .... Herbert 9. Hawaiian Patrol Aloha Stewart Star Spangled Banner. Film Kisses End In Incinerator HOLLYWOOD () The odds and ends of kisses and don't think there aren't a flock of them cluttering up cutting room waste baskets meet the same fate as other over-length scenes. They are burned up, and not of their own heat, either. They are burned with uninteresting scenes. erroneous scenes, scraps of film. Maybe a million hearts beat faster when Errol Flynn takrs Bette Davis into his arms and smacks her like he meant it. But when they burn up the beginnings and the ends, no one cares not even the assistant film editor's second assistant. AFTERTHOUGHT