Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 68, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 July 1933 Edition 02 — Page 6
PAGE 6
LATEST MUSICAL COMEDY MOVIE IS NOW AT THE APOLLO
Helen Hayes and Robert Montgomery Have Roles of Quarreling Husband and Wife in ‘Another Language,’ on View at the Palace. “I\/fOONLIGHT lor romance, pretzels for fun.'* is the rpanner In which CarJ Laemmle, head of Universal Films, Is said to have explain'd the title "Moonlight and Pretzels," the new musical romance now at the Apollo, The new photoplay employs the services of screen stars, radio entertainers and members of the legitimate stage. Some of which are Mary Brian. Bernice Claire, Jack Denny and his Waldorf-Astoria orchestra. Alexander Gray. Roger Pryor, Lillian Miles. Leo Carillo. the four Eton boys. Frank and Milt Britton Band, Bobby Watson, Herbert Rawiinson, William Frawley, Mary Lange, Max Stamm. Doris Carson,
Geraldine Dvorak, Richard Keene and fifty of New York’s most lovely chorus girls. As could be expected of a lavish musical film. Moonlight and Pretzels," introduces many new songs, eight in number, including “Dusty Shoes." "Ah. But It’s Love," "Babv in Your Hat,” There’s a Little Bit of You in Every Love Song," "Gotta Get Up nnd Go to W’ork,” and "Are You Making any Money?" The story, concerning a young songwriter, whom leaves the smalltown music store to crash Broadway, leaving his sweetheart behind, was written by Arthur Jarrett in collaboration with Monte Brice. Karl Freund directed from the adaptation by Monte Brice. Bobby Connollv, who staged such musicals of the legtimate stage as "Flyin' High." "Good News,” "Take a Chance" and Follow Thru,” staged the dances of "Moonlight and Pretzels." matt “ANOTHER LANGUAGE” IS ON SCREEN AT PALACE. Helen Hayes and Robert Montgomery are co-starred in "Another Lang ua g e,” filmed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer from the Rose Franken stage success which ran for more than a year on Broadway,with the film adaptation which is now on view at Loew’s Palace. Asa play "Another Language" proved to be the most popular comedy-drama to reach Broadway, in several years. Its story concerns the oppressive effect of a middle class family upon the happiness of a young girl who marries into it. a stranger to the customs of the household. In ths M feature, the “heavy" is the husbands mother whose devotion to his interests become a selfish rivalry against the young wife's love. The husband's family, middleclass and clannish, resents the bride's interest in art and "highhat" ideals. The results are much the same as to be found in the complications of many families. Helen Hayes as Stella, the young bride who is interested more in sculpture than in family dinners, has a role strikingly different from her recent hit protrayaJs in ' The White Sister" and "A Farewell to Arms.” Robert Montgomery, who romes to thus picture direct from his success in ‘‘Wh o n Ladies Meet," plays the young husband who is unable to shake off the influence of his selfishly-adoring mother. The difficult mother role is played by Louise Closser Hale. This characterization provides motivation for the plot and shows the domination of a well-intending mother-in-law who actually is the young wife’s rival in her hold upon the son. John Beal, who scored in the juvenile role of Jerry in the original stage presentation, repeats his brilliant performance in the picture. He is cast as the impulsive nephew who rebels against family tyranny and complicates matters by falling i madly in love with his young Aunt Stella. The role of the father is filled by Henry Travers, whose father characterization in "Reunion in Vienna" was widely acclaimed. Prominent parts are also played by Willard Robertson. Minor Watson and Maidel Turner. Holding the feature spot on the short subjects is another one of Hal Roach's over-popular Taxi Boy's comedy, "Thundering Taxis" and a Silly Symphony cartoon, "Three Little Pigs." which was filmed in technicolor. An animal life adventure. "Beneath Our Feet.” promises to lie instructive as well as entertaining. World news events as picturized by the Hearst Metrotone News rounds out the procram for the week. a a a EDDIE CANTOR MOVIE AT C IRCLE "Whoopee.” starring Eddie Cantor, has been re-issued as a musicalrevival, and is now on view at the Circle. Its sponsors are respectively the greatest pioneer of the motion picture in America and the musical comedy king of the American stage. Its star. Eddie Cantor, is known wherever there are theaters as a comic artist of genius. In its stage form, produced by Mr. Ziecfeld in New York, with Cantor in the lead, it ran over a year and a half. Included in its cast are Eleanor Hunt, the red-haired beauty whom Samuel Goldwyn considers one of his greatest finds; Dorthy Knapp, famed "most beautiful girl in the world;" Paul Oregon', $25,000 tenor: Ethel Shutta, and such famous Ziegfeld glorified girls as Jeanne Morgan, Muriel Finley and Virginia Bruce. Thorton Freeland, brilliant young director, who is known as one of the fastest rising people of Hollywood, directed this picture. The stage production of “Whoopee" made New York gasp by its lavish beauty. In the freer medium of the talking screen. "Whoopee" has outdone eve nits stage incarnation. Such internationally famous beauty spots as Zion national park DANCING 1 VILLA VANESE TWO Noblesville Rd. Cover, Sat., 40c; Sun.. 25c Bill Eakstein's 10-Piece Orchestra I leer lie IV Ash. 33*4-2 _
> -SSL > > JJS, RIVERSIDE SUNDAY NIGHT FIREWORKS ■SSs jOrH TOt\W
furnished the backgrounds for the outdoor scenes. Scores of beautiful girls selected from among 5.000 applicants by Mr. Goldwyn and Mr. Zlegfeld personally. the expenditure of nearly two million dollars, and months of careful preparation make Whoopee" a never-to-be-forgotten spectacle. Color is used lavishly throughout. Seventy-four changes of scene, 512 different changes of costume, scenes in which four and five hundred people were concerned, are figures which give some idea of the cale with which the GoldwynZiegfeld combination have gone about bringing the friut of their different experiences into focus for this one picture. a a a “WHEN LADIES MEET" DI E AT THE AMBASSADOR Starting Sunday the Ambassador, at Illinois and Market, will present Metro’s five star picture with Ann ’ Harding, Robert Montgomery. Alice Brady. Frank Morgan and Mvma , Loy in "When Ladies Meet.” The story concerns a youthful girl novelist, infatuated with her publisher. a dashing newspaper man. The man is married but carries j on the courtship only to find little J Miss Novelist has a boy friend who \ is very jealous. The boy sets a trap ! and brings his girl and the pub- i Usher's wife face to face. Adriotlv the married woman. I played by Ann Harding, shows the young lady how foolish sne would be to surrender to her husband in the belief that such an attachment would endure. While the boy friend, played by Robert Montgomery, scores triumphallv over the love situations, there is a violent scene in which the publisher learns that the scorn of two women is far worse inan one. : Supplementing the feature will be a Zazu Pitts-Thelma Todd comedy entitled, "One Track Mind,’ Strange At Is Seems Reel and News events. The program runs until Wednesday night. a a a DOUBLE FEATURE PROGRAM AT ALAMO The Alamo starting today and for 1 three days will present another double feature program headed by the first showing of Jack Hoxie in "The Pony Express,” a western film "loaded” with gun thrills, trick horsemanship and romance. Jack, as a government agent delivers mail and valuables via his horse "Dynamite." His job is far from a peaceful and quiet one. as bandits are always pursuing him. A pretty girl, plays an important part in his work and of course he falls In love with her. Not only making him a lovely sweetheart, she also assists him in rounding up a bandit gang that had been robbing the mails and faking land owners’ pai>ers. Tlie extra feature presents i Charlie Murray and George Sidney 1 in "Cohns and Kellys in Trouble,” a ' comedy in which the two comics are I accused of being rum-runners. The plot takes part on the high- ! seas, with the pair being strictly dry- i land sailors, and they encounter i many funny situations trying to iron 1 out their troubles. A cartoon and news reel will also be shown.
AT THE LYRIC
W. C. Fields W. C. Fields is featured in another of his comedy sketches. This one entitled "The Barber Shop," which heads the short subject bill at the Lyric this week. MUTUAL 132 SOUTH ILLINOIS ST, Starting ag Dili irr Show With mIUnl II C Tonight BOWERY BURLESQUERS WITH Fields - Ferguson ! YOUTHFUL PIDI 0 5 sharpy biKLo GET UP A PARTY AND ATTEND
1— Robert Montgomery and Helen Hayes are caught In the midst of a serious love scene from the picture, “Another Language,” which also features the late Louise Closser Hale. Now at the Palace. 2 Warren Hymer and Robert Armstrong seem deeply interested in what Edmund Lowe is hearing over the telephone in the picture at the Lyric this week, entitled “I Love That Man." 3 Eddie Cantor is about to punctuate one of his own “cracks” with
Skating Is Very Popular
Riverside Park to Have Fireworks Display Sunday. A display of fireworks will again be presented Sunday night at Riverside amusement park, it is announced, the weekly pyrotechnic program proving to be one of the most popular free attractions offered at the West Thirtieth' street fun spot. This week's display, it is said, will include a number of new and novel set pieces and aerial bombs never before shown in this city. The Dayton Fireworks Company is making up the program, and promises some real surprises for Sunday night's show. Tonight, at Riverside, the second of the weekly bargain fun nights for Times readers will be observed, and preparations have been made to entertain another great throng of thrifty folk who have been clipping out and saving the half-fare ride coupons printed every day in The Times. Many thousands of Times readers visited Riverside last Saturday night and enjoyed a big evening of fun and thrills. Extra help has been engaged for tonight in the auto parking spaces and on the rides, Manager A. W. Colter states, and the concessions will open early and close late tonight to accommodate what promises to be a record crowd. The Riverside dance palace continues to be thronged nightly, and E. W. Mushrush, director, is providing special features each evening during the week. Hal Bailey and his Collegians furnish the music. Roller skating in the big Riverside rink continues popular right through the summer, with sessions on Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday and Sunday afternoons and nights. The shady picnic grove and the children's playground are proving more popular than ever this summer. the free checking sendee for picnic baskets being utilized by hundreds each week-end. No permit is necessary to use the park picnic grounds and there is no charge to enter at any time. Bobs Hair and Name to Win Part In order to win the part of a carefree girl in "Shanghai Madness," featuring Spencer Tracy. Miriam Jordan deliberately changed her name to Mimi, had her hair cut short and took on that unsophisticated yet entirely mundane attitude typical of the modern young girl. For executives, who before then had thought of her only as a cold beauty of the sophisticated type, cast her immediately in the leading feminine role of the swashbuckling story.
MOTION PICTURES BE fjr After mg Honeymoon--What? Tjjjgj WM • • *l>e frankent modm t-m drama ever screened: a I | | HELEN 1 Hayes ROBERT MONTGOMERY ANOTHER LANGUAGE’ 1 Louise Closser Hale Jj Henry Travers Wt Pjjjk * **> Mpt —extra j yjT Hal Roach's \r4 # TAXI BOYS V I "THUNOERiNG TAXIS” 1 I A Mesro-Oeidwyn-Mayea 1 I C omedy Kiot | | Malt Disney I | BILLY SYMPHONY 1 I COLOR CARTOON fl \ "THREE UTTLE PIGS” I Hacrtt Matrotona Nart
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
CHARACTER STUDY ON CIVIC THEATER SET
mm • ' •- * '"-S . V. ~ .
Jane Gent and Hale Mae Keen Jane Gent and Hale Mae Keen appeared in the above scene from ‘Landscape With Figures.” which was the final offering of the Civic theater in the first season. Officials of the theater have announced a second summer season for 1934, lasting probably six weeks.
ROUNDING ROUND TUT? A 'T'TT'D Q with Walter 1 1 H/IVO and. HICKMAN
THOUSANDS of people will always remember a rocking chair on a front porch in a stage play. This memory will be cherished by many who saw Louise Closser Hale as Grandma Belt in “Miss Lulu Bett.” Death has taken another Indianapolis contribution to the legitimate stage as well as the movies. In the death of Mrs. Hale, the stage and screen has lost a great woman and a fine actress.
Also in the world of literature she will be missed because she was the author of numerous books and magazine articles. The talking screen will keep ever fresh ths memory of this fine actress. Right now, her work as a nagging mother in "Another Language” now at Loew's Palace is being staged. I understand this is her last acting part. It is a most unsympathetic role but the artistry and ability of the actress makes it a tremendously realistic characterization. Vinegar in it but true to life. Os the many things she has done on the stage and the screen, I liked her “Grandma Bett" on the stage the best. Thousands of moviegoers in Indianapolis will keenly feel the passing of this actress. She has taken her final curtain. It was not before an audience but before the eye of the camera. a a a Ace Berry, manager of the Circle theater, is all "ga-ga.” For years he has been wanting to bring Texas Guinan and her gang to town. And now he is about to do it.
MOTION l-H Tl RES V M jy t I B BMWn] L I*l > [toe Owned—Home Opqratedjj
that of an egg. The scene is from “Whoopee.” which is enjoying a week’s revival at the Circle. 4 Ann Harding and Myrna Loy appear startled at something, but then a great many startling things might happen "When I-adies Meet,” the picture showing at the Ambassador, starting Sunday. 5 Mary Brian returns to the screen in another of the musicals which are sweeping the country, this one, which is the fare at the Apollo for the week, being "Moonlight and Pretzels.”
On Friday, Aug. 11, Texas and her “sucker" yelling crew of thirty, will open a week's engagement at the Circle. "The little lady,” Ace explains, "opened an engagement yesterday in the Chicago theater. In spite of the heat, her opening audiences were tremendous in spite of the fact she just recently closed at the Century of Progress. “Indianapolis is one of the few cities to get the sendees of Texas and her gang because Hollywood is calling and she must start a picture soon.” And so Ace is all “ga-ga.”
MOTION PICTURES ms ~ NOW—2S c TILL 6 After 6—Bal. 25e —Orch. 40c
Movies in Neighborhoods
BBLMONT—Saturday, ‘The Crime Os The Century" and California Trail"; Sunday, ' Dloiomanlacs" and Below The Sea*.;' OW'HI Hi—Saturday, "His Pa.it of Marv Holmes." TUXEDO—Saturday. "The Crime Os The Century”; Sunday. ‘‘Adorable" and "The Storv of Temple Drake " IK VlNG—Saturday. 'False Faces" and "Teleeranh Trail": Sunday. "The Eaele I and the Hawk" and Ex-Ladv.” GARFlFhD—Saturday. "Soldiers of the Storm"; Sunday. “Out AU Nurht" and "Sone of the Eaele." TACOMA—Saturday. "Under the Tonto Rim"; Sunday Out AU Nlsht" and ! “Sone of the Eaele." TAAJBOTT —Saturday. "Wild Qlrl" and "Gold' ; Sunday. "A Bed-Time Story" and "The Kiss Before The Mirror." STRAND-Saturday. "Hotel Variety" and Whirlwind": Sunday. “Zoo In Budapest" and "Private Jones." ORlENTAL—Saturday. "Sweepings'' and 'Tlie Kid From Spain": Sunday. “Aqorable ' and Dangerous Cross-Roads " ST. CLAlß—Saturday. The Mummv" and "The Kid From Spain"; Sunday. "Zoo In Budapest" and "Diplomanlars." RITE— Saturday. "Below tho Sea": Sunday. Adorable." UPTOWN-Saturday. "Elmer The Great": Sunday. "International House.” GARRlCK—Saturday. "The Man Called Back" and Murder At Midnight"; Sunday. "Blessed Event" and- Nice Women." REX—Saturday. Humanity": Sunday. "Elmer the Great" and "Hey. Hey. Westerner." DAlSY—Saturday. "The Fighting Champ" ahd "Man Hunt"; Sunday. "The Eagle and the Hawk" and "Blondle Johnson.” TRlVCESS—Saturday. "The Pass of Marv Holmes" and "Drum Taos' : Sunday. "A Study In Scarlet" and “Puss In Boots." SANDERS—Saturday. "The Circus Queen Murder" and “Sundown Rider '; Sunday. "The Big Cage” and "Pick Up. HAMlLTON—Saturday. "Out All Night" and Man of Action"; Sunday. "The Eagle nnd the Hawk" and "The Silver Cord." FOUNTAIN SQUARE— Saturday. "Zoo In Budapest” and Haunted Oold." GRANADA—Saturday. ‘The Cohens and tho Kellvs in Trouble." and the WKBF "Barn Dance." RlVOLl—Saturday "The Story of Temple Drake" and "Below the Sea”: Sunday. "The Devil's Brother." STRATFORD—Saturday, "Igloo.” Fenton Is Now a Farmer Hollywood's latest gentleman farmer Is Leslie Fenton. He and his wife, Ann Dvorak, are seriously making a truck farm out of their ten acres near Van Nuys. They expect to clear a nice profit from their peas, beans, corn, etc. Fenton is now working in ‘’Night Flight" at Metro-Goldyn-Maver under the direction of Clarence Brown. Dune* I# Humid but. nnd EA XS Cork's Sun. | Corkers HARBOR OPEN AIR AVHEN POSSIBLE Drive out IV. Wash. St. to Ben Davis,. follow Municipal Airport sign south. FREE DANCING Week From Next Thursday BEER REASONABLY PRICED
MOTION PICTURES i , t,i fe wfi 3 fLr an/ W r*l SO GORGEOUS W / J SHOW GIRLS fj / 6 BIG SONG HUS £/ CAST J SCREW STAGS Kg UNO RADIO STARS >\ Nomuw. tann^l 12 STARS W ji Lee CerrHfe / j| \f Mary Brian i | / Racer Pryor j % Lillian Milos 1 ~%W Jack Denny and orchestra \\ M Aiexonder Gray Bernice Claire A V 4 Eaton Boys j M Prank and Milt JSL prirron vnno v
Edmund Lowe and Nancy Carroll Forced to Aid Crooks in Oaring Robbery in 'I Love That Man.' the Current Movie Feature at Lyric. EDMUND LOWE and Nancy Carroll play the leading roles in ' I Iv® That Man. drama of a woman's devotion to a man she knows to be a good deal less than trustworthy, now at th I vric Heading the supporting cast are Robert Armstrong. Lew Cody, Warren Hymer, Dorothy Burgess. Grant Mitchell and Luis Alberni Harry Joe Brown directed this Charles R. Rogers production tor Paramount. The story centers around Lowe and Mias Carroll—a strange pair bound together by a curious emotional tie. Lowe is a confidence man —a shrewd crook who finds r.o greater pleasure in life than separating I a sucker from his money.
Concert to Be Given at Park Big Water Show Announced at Broad Ripple on Sunday. # Broad Ripple's water show this week will feature a band concert by the Indianapolis school band. This organization has been entertaining the guests of the north side resort every other week this'season. Tonight. Broad Ripple will give a fireworks show at the pool. Fireworks will b-> presented every Saturday night for the remainder of the summer. The water show Sunday will feature diving by John Shaw and Vincent Pulliam. Arno Wade will give some of his comic dives and stunts. Wade will perform his chair dive ( this week. In this dive, he la tied on to a kitchen chair and tossed into the pool from the twenty-foot tower. Enoch, the 73-year-old underwater swimmer, will present his bag of tricks this week. The Airdome is presenting “The Thirteenth Guest,” starring Ginger Rogers, Sunday night. The dance pavilion is presenting Jack Berry, Russ Holler and their orchestra every night except Monday with waltz nights on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday. The roller skating rink is becoming popular with the visitors to Broad Ripple. The park has made the rink available for skating without charge to those who bring their own skates. Veteran Actress Gets Job Margaret Dumont, veteran stage actress, is in Hollywood to play in the Four Marx Brothers' picture, "Cracked Ice.” Norman McLeod is directing.
MOTION PICTURES METRO'S r!VE-ST\K DR\M\TIC HIT! ROBERT MONTGOMERY—ALICE BRADY 1 Kf* RALPH MORGAN T „l,r, “WHEN LADIES MEET” CHILDREN 100 EXTRA! FITTS-TODD COMEDY RIOT! r #2sl adults (Cwftl ' Wtf&l ra lo NLY m JL m JLJLeirIJLdfcJL. ,p / ■APICTUHf Os- WILD MODERN YOUTtt / rH|jw|Hfv£e.v man woman cttouiit sit' BT* lpgn| TTOBQUE mA
NORTH SIDE l| .t-l X' J| Talbot A 22nd BmW*l l~g MMHi Double Feature Charles Farrell, “Wild Girl" Jack Hoxie, “Gold” Sunday—Dntiblf Fwltiro—llHpii T wel rot ree* “A BEDTIME STORY” Pnnl Ltika —Nanrv Carroll “KISS BEFORE THE MIRROR" BEDuCHiEI ,9,h * Col,r ” Adventures of the Arctic “IGLOO” Sundae —Donhle Foatnre— Clyde Beatty “THE BIG CAGE” “LUXURY LINER” aaHHHVV at Mm, Double Feature Zone Grev'a “HERITAGE OF TIIF, DESF.RT” Warren Wllllitm “EMPI.OYEES’ ENTRANCE” Sunday—Double Feature —Fay Wray “KING KONG” Dnugla* Fiiirbnnke ,lr.. Bette Darla -PARACHUTE JUMPER” ■'4 IT-IItTJH 111. at aoth ■l.liliin, Double Feature Darla Kenton "TITE MAN CALLED BACK" Alter tt hlte “MCRDER AT MIDNIGHT” Sunday—Double Fenfire—Leo Traex “BLESSED EVENT’ Frnne-i Dee—Sidney Fox "NICE WOMEN” -"I il 1,01 h V N'orthwp*tern Boots Mallory—A. Kirkland "HUMANITY” S*ir*lnr—.fo* K. Brown “ELMER THE GREAT” Comedy—“ Hey, Hey, Westerner” EAST SIDE Dearborn 1 "* h MM 11 II I )Hi Double Feature Miriam Hopkln* “Story of Temple Drake” Fay Wray “Below the Sea” Sundav—Laurel-Hirdr In “THE DEVIL’S BROTHER” 1 Trntb ’Janet Gaynor—Henry Carat “ADORABLE” Sunday—Bums. Allen “INTERNATIONAL HOUSE” ■pTT T TTir7JT r M *m e. i nth st. Double Feature *Hm ummerrllle “OUT ALL NIGHT” Tim Mr Coy "MAN OF ACTION" Sunday—Double Feature— Irene Doan -THE SILVER CORD” Tredrlc Marrh—Carole Lombard "EAGLE AND THE HAW*?'
JULY 29, 1933
Miss Carroll is a girl of good background, who knows the moment she meets Lowe that he is the one man in the world she can love. Suddenly, without quite understanding how. Lowe finds himself in a legitimate business venture, earning more money bv legal methods than he has ever done by illegal ones. Unexpectedly a pair of crooks with whom he was formerly associated drift into the scene, demand the money out of which Lowe once had swindled them, and—at the point of a gun—force both him and tho girl to participate in sensationally daring bank robbery. The bank robbery In the picture is based on an actual crime of a similar kind that took place recently in Chicago. All residents of an apartment building above a bank were herded into a couple of rooms and kept there for three days while the bandits drilled into the steel vaults of the institution and looted them. To avoid outside Interference, a fake quarantine sign was placed ad the apartment's entrance and the robbery* was executed over a week# end and the following Monday which was a legal holiday. Besides ”1 Low That Man, 1 * the Lyric is also offering a program of short films that include* W, O. Fields In a two-reel Mack Sennett comedy entitled "The Barber Shop," the Three X Sisters Is a Paramount song reel entitled "Sing, Sisters, Sing,” and the latest Issue of Paramont Sound News.
Busy Again Two former "greats” of stage and screen are working as extras in the night club sequence* of Paramount's “Midnight Club” today. One Is Pat Somerset. formerly matinee Idol and film favorite. Charles Morton, who also worked In the dance scenes with Clive Brook and Helen Vinson, was Just a few years back, one of Hollywood's leading contract players.
EAST SIDE S*7 F. Waih. BRuUaiMßi Double IVnlnra Peggy Shannon, “False Fares’* John Wayne, “Telegraph Trail" Sunday—Double Feature—Bette Dari# “EX-LADY** Fredrlo Mar>li —Carole lombard “EAGLE AND THE HAWK* fc w Ji tut * w*t* Znne Grey’* "UNDER THE TOVTO RlM** tnnday—Double Feature— Rlrhnrd dried “SONG OF THE EAGLE” Slim Summerville—Zn*q I’lttg "OUT ALL NIGHT* SOUTHSIDi At Fountain Square > ' Double Feature John Wayne “HAUNTED GOLD” Loretta Young:—Gene Raymond “ZOO OF BUDAPEST” Comedy—Mickey’s Charity Sunday—Double Feature —“ally F.ller “HOLD ME TIGHT” Ralph Bellamy—Fay Wray “BELOW THE SEA” Carnera-Miarkev light I‘iotureo ■mTrnTTm pro,p * c t * n<l shf!br ■S'T.IJiJI±ILMM Double Feature Buck Jones, “Sun Down Rider” Adolphe Menjou “Circus Queen Murder” Sunday—Dmihlf F^tupp—( I' fft llatt|T “THE BIG CAGE 0 George Raft, "Pick Up" ■ Vlr. at Fountain aLuUJuXSLJ Double Feature Sldney-Murrsy “Cohens and Kellys In Trouble” Tom Keene "Son of the Border” Sunday—Laurel-Hardy “The Devils Brother” west SIDE IF N I'll! IT’JI W. With at BeL ■ Double Feature jean llersholt "Crime of the Century” Buck Jones, "California Trail* Sunday—Double fiiMirr —tar Bray "BELOW THE SEA" Wheeler-Woolvey In "DIPLOMAMACS" ■MryvneMH r.lfl W. Mirh. ; HIHULIkrMHM Bargain Bob Steele, “The Fighting Champ* Junior Durkin, “Man Hunt” Sunday—Double Feature—Joan Bloodrll "BLONDIE JOHNSON" Fredrle Her oh—Cary Grant •EAGLE AND THE HAWK" J
