Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 September 1936 — Page 16

- approximately five months. In fact, |

Sheila and Kathleen, all are appearS¥ne Flough and. the Stars.” i “Tarsan Estapes,

WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 23, 1936

: Se paGEYs

~ COLOR PROCESS CAUSE OF WO RY TO 'RAMONA’ PRODUCERS

Camera Eye Makes Mild Shade ‘Loud’

Special Care Weered al]

Filming Picture Coming Here.

Asn Indian youth was wearing a pink shirt. That was

all night with the Twentieth |

Century Fox Corp. It had

worries of 1ts own, because it |

was filming “Ramona,” which is to open at the Apollo here ¥nday. + ibat i= it was all right with imeniieth Century Fox Corp. until

BERL morning when the films of yes-

ITCRT = scene were shown. The pink Saat the Indian voulh was wearing foEranaied, In the pictures, a scene iat took in thousands of acrds of Celformia landscape, and should

Bete piven much attention to highly 1 i player 2 ¥ ‘the scene was taken pve. ang the Indian bov was given SEEREISNng Desides a pink shirt to

Ome morning the pictures of the presgonis day's takes were shown end Miss Joretta Young's face SCWTC up blood-red on the screen Reflector Is Blamed

iis caused a good deal of tech-

mica fxciiement until it was disposered 1hat a gold reflector, which ise been unnoticed as the film was | ER, Nat Deen respons ible. Th8t gives you an idea of the SESITY Comor pictures are to all conImac with getting them ready for tie screen. The company says it had | 2 afl of technicians at work tor a id ©8I Oriole the handle o1 a famera was turned in the filming Bf 1h DIciure Faria; make-up has been changed recirail ior ithe color camera. Thock tawny cream make-up

showed up best for black and whi

» hght beige dressing, which tones

gown the subcutaneous color, is the anty type for color work. Eye make- | MP 5 loned down greatly and rouge mast de leit off entirely.

Even Lipstick must be left out ef he marekup rooms, for the natBral color in Laps 1s quite suilficient. Some lips that have a little more than sverage color must be painted ore n Numerous make-up tests before he color camera were conducted by Paul Stanhope, head of the group ™ oolor artisis assigned to this production. and William Skall, chief phoiographer. before all the diffiTHis were met

Human Eve Dull The mormal human eye is very | full compared with the color cam- | ra, Stanhope said. There are many | poor: the eye does not see or which 31 registers in a much subdued tone. Hawrdressers, too, have new prob- | jms on a color set. Black hair | must be the proper shade of black, Ahe color camera will register it | Hue or with reddish glints in it. The mairdressers, however, had no | trouble with the Indians appearing is the film. for their hair was a.| commpicte. natural black. An ecru must be used on white! bear, for dead white really has pink | ant. blue tints, which show up on ® color Glm. That so-called patentioether hair is never permitted on a | polar setting. for it will reflect the | hive skv above or any other out-| standing color nearby. Cameramen no longer trust their fees, bul resort to various color! meters 10 determine how much and! whet Kind of light will properly fil- | fer through the lens. Lights and| refeciors must be arranged exactly | because the color camera lacks | gepih of color focus. In other words, |

; f .@ color lens will pick up a different | |

poder for a red chair nearby than | for 8 simi lar chair at a greater disianoe—uniess the lights are just so. Set Hard te Find

Henry King, director. of “Ramona,” searched all southern Cali- | fmrmia before he found a setting |

—3300 feet up in the San- Jacinto! Mountains in a8 44000 acre green grass meadow Color tests proved the location sfe2l Every stone, tile and timber mad In the construction of the | Sure hacienda had to be treated rhemically before leaving Hollywood. | Everyvihing was made to blend math the natural subdued colors of | hte trees. ground and shrubbery. Walter Jolley. head of the paint Separtment. got his chance there | tn gemonstrate his knowledge. He | has learned that to photograph a natural green, he must make his green 2 bluish green. In ordinary | green the yellow “floats _on top. | A natural blue is obtained by; “ssashing” it. or in other words, by not using too much blues i

Ww, C Fields Able

| certs series at English’'s on Nov.

HOLLYWOOD. Sept. 23—W. C.| Fields, who has been quite ill, re-| pently tock his first auto ride in|

v

#2 was his first trip away from a | hospital in that time. Leaving Las Encinas Sanitarium, ! =here he has been since his re-

cal iverside Hospital [iS to open moval from Riversid D {weeks on Oct. 5.

local operatic presenta [i ; leas tion, Chicago always has received | Reeks before he Will be released ! the San Carlo enthusiastically. Last | SAE le vear the company had to extend its | - engagement for a week, playing to | FAMED PEOPLE ism a capacity house of 4000 at each | Recent distinguished visitors to | performance. Later Martens offerings are to in- | clude the Musical Art Quartet, St. Louis | Viadimir Horowitz, pisais, and Lily | Pons, | radio soprano.

INDIAN ( GIVEN TEST An intelligence test of a primitive | was used to ascertain how | many words Johnny Weissmuller | could be supposed to have learned |

many weeks ago. he went for an! hour's drive. It will be several more |

rom the hospital.

Freddie Bartholomew, Jackie Coop- | er and Mickey Rooney on the set of “The Devil Is a Sissy,” include | Alice Roosevelt Longworth, Mrs. | Mabel Walker Willebrandt, and Judge J. M. Braude, presiding judge of the Chicago Bors Court.

WHOLE FAMILY IN FILM

Pat O'Malley, former star of silent | Indian

films. his wife and tw8 children; |

WITH SPITALNY ORCHESTRA

Lyric Theater Fridhy. * with Patricia Ellis, The orchestra radio ‘hour idea the band w orked out.

ui lacial experts discovered |

back in shape.

The date. on the letter was Sept.

bers. Seminar Organized Here

Heger-Goetzl to Find New New | Talent.

+/of talking pic- | tures is an organ and | referred to as an {| assen” But never-3 | theless, Mr. Joe” the | cantor, its presiof the Arthur | dent, spent some will | | more money to get it tuned up. Then he went out and hired Mr.

coaching experience of Dr.

Jordan Conservatory of Music, | be available to Indianapolis singers | | this Tall rough. 1 a spec ial opera | Jimmy Boyer, who has played organ has been | programs over WIRE and WFBM, rand who recently completed a long to find | engagement with Herbie Kay's or- | new operatic talent in the city and | chestra, to play it. | assist established singers with their | | knowledge of opera literature and days, | mtefpresation as a result of the|2and on Saturdays also will play at There will be two weekly {3:30 p. m. | sessions of the seminar, are 11 a. m. on Mondays and | meeting at :30 p. m. on Fridays. | Simon, and “Shakedown,” with Lew The latter is shown | three days for the first time in the

| seminar which | organized at the music selonl. Heger- -Goetzl hopes

{ the second at 7 | Registration will be held next week | &yres. {and sessions will begin Sept. 28. Actual operas will be sung at the | city.

| Bach person | assigned a part. present Humperdinck's in December and excerpts |

The seminar will |

Bird: Cause No End of Trouble to Movie Directors and Casts

in the spring. |formances will be given with fail | accompaniment. operas will be sung in English. Members of the vocal staff of the | will co-operate with | in coaching the | All singers of the jeity mature had arranged to his liking | eligible to enroll E. which will give academic credit to! | properly qualified individuals. { sions will be held at the main con- |

rorchestral

Ballet to Open Concert Series

Joos Company Is Booked

as Substitute. the

until | strange actors, tour of the | long and profanely | wanted to. Love Bird—The most

{traction on Nov. ; i fall season in Montreal Monday. in Chicago for three

Shown above is Maxine, a featured singer with Phil Spitalny and which opens for one week at the With the stage show will be the picture, Mickey Rooney, is to present

Jimmie, Boyer, Radio Artist, Signed by Rivoli Management to Play Instrument.

Dennis Moore and a stage show built around the

Theater Adds Organ Concert. as Regular Program Feature,

Film Stars Ever After

Change Studio Affiliations

| When Better Contracts | Are Offered.

BY RUTH M'TAMMANY

Times Hollywood Correspondent

"HOLLYWOOD, Sept. 23.—

| Hollywood stars are like ro] | mads, changing their habitat | ' to greener and more produc‘tive places. Eddie Cantor, | long attached to the Samuel | Goldwyn enterprises, signs | with Twentieth Century Fok where his first picture to be] made will be based on his own life story. At one time it

looked as though there would be a court airing of the Can-

tor-Goldwyn differences but | amicable agreement was made |

| and both parties are satisfied. | Gary Cooper, Paramount's ace

| box office draw, moves to the Gold- | wyn lot at the expiration of his | present contract. Paramount's suit {for damages against Goldwyn runs linto the millions, Huge sums will | | be spent by both companies but it | {can be entered in the books as “pub- | licity” cost. James Cagney, who staged a sen- | |sational walkout from the Warner

| Studio, is going to make pictures | [= another lot. | Bette Davis, now in England, has | just received the news that Warner | Bros. injunction may prevent her | from making a picture there. Her | agent lunched at the Warner res|taurant yesterday and there may be a settlement in progress,

Every Star Has Agent

{ | Every star has an agent—usually la wise connoisseur of the box office {strength of his client and his or

“I have spent considerable -money putting the organ in the theater |her importance to another studio. I believe there is a future for it in the theater.

“(signed) Joe Cantor.”

|1t is this agent's job to secure the | most money for his charges. Heneée

22, 1936. The postmark, Indianap- | tife bartering for a small number

It all adds up to this!

| of stars until the salaries paid sky-

The Eten | rocket to figures which would have | Theater Corp. which took over the | staggered the conservative Andrew |

| Rivoli Theater early this summer, | Carnegie.

bought for $12,000 | an asset listed in the legal papers as an organ. The Eten Thea ter Corp. press {agent wrote Th | Times that “rarely in these days

So, tomorrow, and on subsequent, Jimmy will play at 8:30 p. m.

The films showing at the time “Girls’ Dormitory”

‘Common Sparrow Called Worst Offender; Intrusions Cause More Time Loss Than Temperamental Star.

| Timez Special HOLLYWOOD. Sept. 23.—The movies are having bird trouble. Not

the variety that sports writers place inside quotes, but real feathered creatures. One little innocent bird can put more gray hairs in a director's héad than a temperamental actress with a bucket full of white paint, The common sparrow is one of the worst offenders, causing more | costly lost time than a spoiled child,

actor. At RKO, a covey of sparrows. afraid, and lost a piece of skin off invaded a sound stage during the | her shapely ankles. Polly nipped

night, holding up a picture three | the ankle in a scene for “Tarzan hours while workmen shooed and| | Escapes.”

shot at them.

During filming of MGM, one I but

sparrow spoiled the sound track be Jeanette MacDonald-Nelson | | { head the cast of “Winterset,” played

Eddy musical before tumbling from | 312 performances of the Maxwell the rafters with a BB shot in his | The recent death of La Argen- breast. tina. noted dancer, has doubled the! | engagements

Among the paid performers, , | following four are listed by directors | which is to open the Marten Con- | as the most onerous actors known: Mina—Sacred to the Hindus, but : | Argentina's managers oo] a pain in the neck to the movies. fo T a k e D r ve upon the European ballet company | | Possesses : {to fill the dancer's American tour. never “telegraphs” { The Joos company is engaged for | { nearly nightly its departure for aOrient the first of the year. The San Carlo Grand Opera Co. which is the local series’ second at- | | mental and inconsiderate. Canary—The most It bird to sound tracks. Parrots are always feared by ac- | {tors. Maureen O'Sullivan was not |

{ pleased.

.| been making speeches all the way

Jimmy Boyer [hr and there were at least three

| The affable Gov. Tingley frem | [ Mexico ‘politacked’ (don't tell Win[chell) his way around the Universal Studio with a handshake for all. Dressed in a Palm Beach suit, and wearing a broad brimmed Panama hat, he was taken several times for Edward Arnold and was much

“I came out to say ‘hello’ to these young players,” he said, “and to hear what they have to say. I've

across the country. If the train stopped on a siding for a few min-

cowboys there I'd get out and tell them about President Roosevelt.” Things I saw recently include: James Melton sitting down to a hearty lunch between sessions of scene taking. “A fellow gets hungry in this picture work—even a tenor.” Gertrude Niesen playing the organ while the rest of the “Top of the Town” company listened. Hugh Herbert had a tear in his eye. Buck Jones looking as western as ever in black leather and high boots. Polly Rowles, the new co-ed from Carnegie Tech playing a scene in

unreliable a blow. Parrot — A dangerous

her first picture, Universal's “Case of the Constant God.”

GIVE 312 PERFORMANCES Burgess Meredith and Margo, who |

Anderson. drama on the New York stage.

Bingo Party and Dance

Eagles Temple, 43 W. Vermont, Thursday, Sept. 24th, 8:30 p. m: Extra Prize for Attendance

Admission 50¢

he will talk loud,

y’? SPENCER TRACY SYLVIA SIDNEY

STUART ERWIN

! Make Reservations Now

KEITH'S

TONIGHT AT 8:15

Federal Players ; “Mrs. Bumpstead-Leigh”

Night Prices, 15e, 25¢, 40e. Sat. Matinee, loc, 30¢

asses

next week -“‘Blind

Higher Pay

new and spectacular fireworks in

{burn tricks, that.she was inacces- |

| Began by getting married when she art in New Movie!

Miss Dudley received a minor wound from a .22 rifle while in the | Production this week.

but the two rarely have been seen |male lead opposite Mae Clarke. together, and it's supposed that the romance has been filed under “Er-

quant rand vivacious. She isn't her smile engaging, and she has a

greatly impressed Hollywood high-

almost always wears, not overalls | —she twists around like an uneasy | small boy—now with a leg over a | chair arm, next with a knee drawn up under her chin. :

reer: “Last year I was determined to do something, but I was too skinny to model. So Dad gave me letters to a pot of producers and I went around looking for-a part in a play. The letters took me into the offices all right, but nobody would hire me.

ONE NIGHT ONLY! NEXT SUNDAY GLEN GRAY

CASA LOMA

Tickets now on sale Ind. Theatre News Shop, SOc. incl, tax, till 6 p. m. next Sunday. After that $1.10.

WALTZ TONIGHT!

Emil Velazco * Featuring his $20,000 Pipe

| AND HIS ORCHESTRA 25¢ Before 9 P. M.

Doris Dudley. ..........not temperamental.

BY PAUL HARRISON HOLLYWOOD, Sept. 23. (N.E. A.)—Doris Dudley says that isn't true

| |

The minute the announcement was made that Miss Dudley was com- | ing to Hollywood from Broadway to appear in “Portrait of a Rebel” with | Katharine Hepburn, people began | predicting that there would be some

, |on the producers I hadn't seen. | talkietown. Scarcely had she arrived | When they asked about experience |

{ than gossip began to go around that | ;

I reeled off the names of those] the actress was hep to all the Hep- plays and said I had appeared in|

| sible, dodged cameras, high-hatted | them in summer stock. |

| every one and was spending ner | ,,. time dashing around in an open Rolls-Royce while wearing a tat- | tered pair of overalls.

He asked if I knew Law- | | rence Langner and I said no. He | | said that was very strange indeed, | | because two of the plays IL had |

{plays. Then I went back to call | Cheer,” a bang-up musical revue | (that ran 18 continuous months to capacity houses before the-star was | forced to drop out from exhaustion. |

‘Jake Shubert caught me up on because I thought it would be easier | than the stage,” he said. “but

beginning to think I was wrong.” land he were appearing, across 42nd-

hi TEMPERS HER TEMPER | Clifton Webb Who Always ‘Wanted to Visit Birthplace Here, Starts on Film Career

Left Here With Parents When Three and Never Had s

Chance to Return; Regarded as Among Most Versatile Performers.

i

Times Special

HOLLYWOOD, Sept. 23.—Clifton Webb, the Indianapolis

boy who made good, knows ‘less about his birthplace than any one in the world.”

“You see,” he explained, “my family left Indianapolis

and went to New York when 1 was three. I've always wanted to go back and visit my home town but I haven't had time.”

Nor does he see an opportunity for such a visit in the

| near future. Under contract to Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, he is | about to launch a motion pic- | {ure career—a lengthy and | “The First Little Show,” “Treasure

Girl,” “She's My Baby,” “Sunny”

| painstaking task. Webb has | and many more. | been making tests and re- Webb is one of the most versatile

stars on the screen. World-famed

hearsing his unique style of | 2c a dancer, he is also a dramatic dances for the screen.

{actor of recognized power, a suave i : co : __ (comedian, a monologist and a singer, I believe it's part of the PIOCESS | That is his professional side. . In

| known as ‘grooming for stardom’.” |private life he is also a painter, | he grinned. “Or don’t they call it sculptor and musician of marked { that any more?” ability,

The screen mayv—and doubtless

He has earned the title “star’— ill—utilize all these various talents

this tall, amiable, debonair gentle-*{in pictures to come. man—by virtue of a score of topiat all about her being temperamental or eccentric or “Hollywood.” | fight Broadway hits,

Unlike Fred Astaire

Thought Films Easier | ~ Because he and Fred Astaire are First it “was. “As Thousands | Pe erstwhile ranking dancers of ? | Broadway, it was suggested, when he came to Hollywood, that he was after the crown—or slippers—of | Astaire, Webb denies he is after 'anything o e kind. : He insist ere is no more excuse

I'm! ifor comp? .on than there was in | those weeks of 1930 when Astaire

“I finally enrolled with the scresn

A golden thread of success rolls | st. from one another, in “The Band

Fact js, says the 19-year-old | mentioned" had been produced by | Pack from “As Thousands Cheer,” | Wagon” and “Three’s-a Crowd,” re-

daughter of a New York newspaper | Langner at his playhouse in West- | man, she hasn't been inside a Rolls- | port.. Mr. Shubert laughed and | Royce, and she is trying to be gra- | was nice about it, but he didn't give | cious to everybody. | me a job. { “And I don't want to be likened | “Eddie ' Dowling hired me, | to Miss Hepburn,” she protests. “Of though.” i course, I admire her enormously. | By this time Miss Dudley had an | But such comparisons are likely to | agent, and Hollywood talent scouts | be fatal to any young actress.” were angling for her. Now she has |

Short-Lived Romance | @ contract.

Back in New York, of course]

Miss Dudley did have a somewhat | Bf adway Star Gets

spectacular record of impulsiveness. |

| |

|

was 14. Her father, when he heard lo about it, said it was all right. But |?" Special the marriage was annulled. She has | HOLLYWOOD, * Sept. 23.—Helen |

a 2-year-old son, Theodore Kurrus Lynd, broadway musical star, has] I. been signed to play a leading role | Only last April, when she was 18, |, «pac Off,” scheduled to go into,

apartment of Sidney Kingsley, 30-| Miss Lynd, a portage of Gus Ed- | year-old playwright. Police said a |Wwards, danced in “The First Little

suicide note was found. She said | Show” and Earl Carroll's ninth ediit. was an accident. tion of the “Vanities.”

Next day she and Kingsley con- Robert Randall, another popular |

firmed a previous announcement stage star, who appeared with Eva that they were engaged.

: Le Gallienne in a series of Ibsen Kingsley is in Hollywood now, biays, was also recruited for the

SUFFERS SPIDER BITE rors.” : Sir Guy Standing is the latest "she's Very Restless | member of the screen colony to sufTalking with Miss Dudley, you fer from spider bite. Although the think of two worn adjectives—pi- | titled Briton was bitten on the eye while on a fishing expedition, it

will not hold up production of his | latest picture, “Girl of the Jungle.”!

beautiful, but her eyes are large,

mobility of expression which has

er-ups. While wearing shorts—which she |

Sir Guy Standing-Frances Langford “PALM SPRINGS” Dick Powell:-Marion Davles { “HEARTS DIVIDED” She told of her brief acting ca- —

“So. I quit in the middle of the | WEST SIDE

list and went home and read 10 |- nt

= = a. 155 E. 10th 'S 1 A T E 202 Ww. loth st. R | V Oo 1 } amen

Charles Bickford

“PRIDE OF THE MARINES” “WHITE A ANGEL”!

BELMONT Double Feature .

¢ E. Brown a EARTHWORM TRACTORS” "MEET NERO WOLF”

A BENSATIONAL HITL

THE GREAT

2510 Ww. Mich, St.

f z D A: | S Y Double Feathre !

Jane Witherg | “LITTLE MISS NOBODY” X

ZIEGFELD f

WM. POWELL ; “ANNIE OAKLEY” MYRNA LOY

LUISE RAINER NORTH SIDE 35c to 8 ® 55¢ Nights

“Flying Colors.” “Three's A Crowd,” | spectively.

| At that time, Webb recollects, no=

| body stood in the center of the car

WHERE, WHAT, WHEN | | tracks tossing a coin to decide which

{dancer may be more worthy of the

APOLLO {admission price. He doesn’t see why -_ “Stage Struck” with Dick Powell, | it Should be otherwise in, the films, Joan Blondel] and Frank McHugh, || A creator of his own dances—each Bl 53 1:36, 3:39 5:42 7:45, and telling its own story, usually inCIRCLE | tegpreting the lyrics of the song to

2 Rr” Ronis. at Thos | which it is paced—Webb believes 3:25, 535 7 :45 AE > | the dramatic -use of lighting has

KEITH 2 scarcely been tapped on the screen,

‘Mrs. Bumpstead-Leigh.” a Federal LAST 2 DAYS

Players production under the direci

tion of John Cameron. Curtain at

LOEW'S | “The Great Ziegfeld with William i Powell, Myrna nd Louise Ranier, at 11:20, 23% 5:48 and 9. | LYRIC | Vaudeville win Johnny Perkins, on i stage at 12:55. 3:46, 6: 37. and 9:28. ‘Two in a- Gissa® with Joel Mc- | Crea and Joan Bennett, on the gorge at 11:14, 2:05, 4:56; 7:47, and

ALAMO

Furu,"” with Spencer Tracy. Also «Absojute Quiet,” with Stuart Erwin.

| AMBASSADOR “Rythm on the Range,” with Bing | Crosby. Also ‘The Postal Inspection,” { with Ricardo Cortez. ! OHIO ‘‘Hearts Divided,” with Dick Powell | and Marion Davies. Also, “Palm Springs’’ with Frances Langford and | Sir Guy Standing. i

| 5 ? _ ASTAIRE | COLOR...

“TWO VO AGAINST THE WORLD”

W. Wash. & Belmont TACOMA HE a

TUXEDO | “obi oF

| R Vv | N G A Woh

AA TAY: | GLORIFIED BY =

BREATH-TAKING #. JIN ITS BEAUTY! ’

in the climax of their young lives,

~ EAST SIDE

Bing Crosby “RHYTHM ON THE RANGE”

Edward Arnold “CRIME AND PUNISHMENT” “TROUBLE FOR TWO”

Lyle Talbot “MURDER BY AN ARISTOCRAT” i ign RADY OF SECRETS” !

George Brent “THE CASE AGAINST MR. AMES” “FIRST A GIRL”

Bing Crosby “RHYTHM ON THE RANGE” . EDUCATING FATHER"

ZARING, “Taras “POPPY’’ “Woman TRAP”

$7. CLAIR = SIPER

“CRIME OF DR. FORBES” -

R T 7 Minas and 310 | EMERSON = Tha

Central at Fall Crk. | HAM | LTO N Double Feature

Last gail eine —— - P A PAR K E R Double Feature r 2 a & College : JOMUANN UPTOWN Special Feature STOR Beery Jt Shirley Tefiple “THREE KIDS AND A QUEEN" KIN “POOR LITTLE RICH GIRL” Family Night, 10c Cartoon—Major Bowes Amateurs—News | : Waihi Presenting Emi "7 30th and Illinois S T R A N D 133 EL aa 5 54 . ” GARRICK Double Feature Jean Hersholt i 5 > =z A Ton of Fun Boars" pum “SINS OF MAN” | The world’s of oy AM SHOW. . ROLE” | great | o Miss AMERICZ | “HITCH-HIK HIKE TO HEAVEN" TT HT E Wa love story filmed Nem J — eo oiare av waree | Paramount Margaret Lindsay entirely in the”

Jean Harlow “SUZY” “SHE COULDN'T TAKE mm 2116 E. 10th St.

bert Young “THREE WISE GUYS" ______ “EDUCATING FATHER” Ly 2936 E. loth St,

“THE FLORENTINE DAGGER”

new perfected! Comedy—Novelly | 3

BENNETT - McCREA

UDELL masa

“GHOST GOES WEST"

30th at Northw'tn.

." X LINGERS O ON" ere HIEEOR Udell at Clifton BIJOU Double Feature

“CHATTER BOX" “ "SOUTH SIDE_____ . DON AMECHE ; albot & 22n EA : . KENT TAYLOR TALBOTT 5 fai | “LoUNTAIN SOUARE “TIMES SQUARE LADY” Double Feature Shirley Temple |} “GO-GET-'EM-HAINES “POOR LITTLE RICH GIRL” ‘

with - Technicolor! !

LorerTA YOUNG

114 E. Washington

NA ne

Ruth Chatterton \ “LADY OF SECRETS" ! “VALLEY OF THE LAWLESS” + H FRANK MERRIWELL Neo. 3

“36 HOURS TO KILL"

“HUMAN CARGO”

Comedy Capt

IR 9th & College

REX Ga xem | SANDERS sosssecraize (If

Edw. Everett Horton “NOBODY'S FOOL” “DANCING FEET”

Ralph Bellamy “DANGEROUS INTRIGUE" “TO BEAT THE Ban

EASTERN BURLESK ASSN. PRESENTS

JL BURLESQUE ROAD ¢ SHOWS

CICTTEYPIIER rod AVALON ‘Gciosr

“ANOTHER FACE”

EVELYN (U? LN A OTE iE | SH DARLING OF BURLE sido] DREA DREAM De GARFIELD ‘pow sizees:

LTR 7.

iT TIE MECCA, SEE ORIENTAL "aim"

Double Feature bt. Montgomery “TROUBLE FOR TWO” “ROAMING LADY”

—_ rane C ON THE AIR”

“FORGOTTEN FACES”