Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 August 1937 — Page 9
PAGE 8 Audience Goes Sailing Again in Souls at Sea’; Duchin ‘Swings’ at Lyric! Muliy and Fire abShow Has Informal A
Sea Feature Movie Kay Francis Seen
Melodrama. On Screen.
| | |
By JAMES THRASHER
You may, if you choose, go» If someone would only start | a-sailing again this week, for | the fad of selecting the year’s | the Circle is showing the sea-| 10 best Lyric stage shows, 1. son's latest screen cruise, should like to put the name “Souls at Sea.” ‘of Eddy Duchin, currently coe ne, tons "oy ADPERTINE A our vaudeville emporium, well up in the list.
all summer. Scarcely have we] mopped up the salt spray of “Cap- | He and his band and several spetains Courageous” and “Slave | cial acts present the sort of show Ship,” when we're on the high seas| that usually rates a big cover again. “Souls at Sea,” by the way, | charge. Besides the expected deis also about a slave ship, but it’s! lightful dance music, there are some infinitely better than its predeces- | eéXtremely clever headliners, and the SO. | whole thing has a refreshing air of | First, and most of all, it is ex- , informality. 5 od citing. You will see a mutiny and | a Duehins a ev. a fire at sea and the two chief play- | oo 2.0% need any additional rec-
ers, Gary Cooper and George Raft, | 4 strung up by their thumbs. | ommendation. After a solo group
: co ib | of request numbers, h ad yesThe fire at sea is the main issue. | Ak first a PES For afterward, the passengers try | cluded a lot of standees—singing to crowd into two lifeboats. Mr. | and whistling old favorites with Cooper, who has charge of the | gusto, It was like ladies’ night at larger one, sees that they will g0 | the Rotary Club, and the audience | down unless the load is relieved. So | Joved it. | he throws several overboard. Later | As novel and amusing an act as the lifeboat is rescued, and when | has passed this way in a long time they reach Philadelphia, Mr. Coop- | is presented by Vic Hyde, aptly laer, “Nuggin” in the picture finds; beled “the one-man swing band.” himself arrested for manslaughter. | He plays piano with one hand, a Opens With Trial avam oon Syn wi both Test . wu ipulates a mp n The picture opens with the trial | 0 pone or OE scene, and the story is treated in|, with the other hand. Then he the flashback manner. For ONCE, | nlavs two, and finally three trumthis technique does not weaken the | pets simultaneously He also offers continuity or drama. The camera |, grand line of chatter. When it recollections show us two ships, one | comes to promoting the old home a slaver and the other a British | town. Mr. Hyde bids fair to do as | patrol boat. “Nuggin” and “Pow- | much for Niles, Mich., as Bob Burns | dah,” his partner, are considered | has done for Van Buren, Ark. the slaver's commanders. But | “Nuggin” really was a captain whose |
Tap Dancer Graceful
MAURICE EVANS AS HIMSELF
Having seen him as Romeo, Napoleon, Charles VII of France, Richard II of England and sundry other characters, theater-goers may be surprised to see Maurice Evans as Maurice Evans. Here is the distinguished English actor aboard his sloop off the Isle of Wight, on a sea-going vacation which will end next week. He is due in New York Sept. 10 to begin the tour of “King Richard II” which will bring him to English’s in January.
ship sank, who was picked up and put in command after the mutiny.
| |
said about tap dancers, it should be said for Miriam Verne. She has
If there were anything new to ve |
“Nuggin” let the cargo of “black | ivory” escape, but the British offi-| grace and agility and a rhythmic cers won't believe him. So he and | sense that set her apart from the “Powdah” are strung up. | usual “hoofer.” Mario and Floria, a | Ashore, “Nuggin” meets Margaret | ballroom dance team, likewise are Tarreyton (Frances Dee). Even the | exceptionally good. | fact that her brother was the man | It Will be a wonder if screen who put his thumbs out of com- | Scouts on the lookout for “scat” | mission doesn’t cool his affection. | Singers don’t pick up Patricia Nor- | “Nuggin” secretly is commissioned | Man one of these days. Miss Norby the British to stamp out the] an, yegulepy Ioaturey Wi at slave trad i : ion | . Is iss | slave trade, with special attention | who can la-de-ah with the best of |
” n =
1 IN NEW: YORIK—s3, ctoret oss
Film Stars Reverse Usual Trek From Broadway
To Movie Capital.
EW YORK, Aug. 28.—That seasonal lament—that Hollywood is taking all the talent away from New York—was never in such disrepute as it has fallen into this year. Those of us who keep track of the transcontinental trains and planes
to Miss Tarreyton’s brother (Henry |
Wilcoxson). All three find themselves aboard the William Brown, Liverpool, for Philadelphia. In midocean, a little girl tips over a lamp and the ship is soon what imaginative journalists call “a blazing inferno.” “Nuggin” Wins Fight There is a terrific fight between
“Nuggin” and Tarreyton before the |
ship goes down. “Nuggin” wins. But he isn't going into the lifeboat until “Powdah” knocks him out and throws him in. “Powdah” has fall-
| them, hings. In addition, Mr. Duchin has a good band, which mixes “sweet” and | “swing,” cert arrangements | doses. | good taste, to back up the impres|sion that the show has everything lit needs.
Plays ‘Stormy Weather’
if your taste runs to such
Yes,
| worried. On the screen, the glamorous Kay
danceable tunes and con-! in the proper | The set and lighting are in|
{ Mr. Duchin plays “Stormy | | Weather,” in case you had been
| are mostly impressed by the large exodus from the capital of the cinema. | For it seems that every celluloid star this year would like to come to | Broadway and appear here in the flesh—properly clothed, of course. That urge to emote without benefit of camera came to the surface this summer when, within three weeks of the arrival of each other, Jean Muir, Frances Farmer; Henry Fonda and Dorothy McKaill turned up to woo the dramatic muse at the summer workshops. And now it looks |jights and the chores of motion picas though all four intend to stay [tures. But she is, they say, an inhere, | domitable creature and accordingly, ! has left word that at first signs of a | FO this eminent quartet, add a suitable play, her Manhattan imdozen more Hollywood favor- | presario is to send for her; she can ites, and Broadway will become vir- | pack hastily and, if necessary, be {tually a branch of Sunset Blvd. Not here on time for rehearsals ihe the least of the glamour girls who morning after the summoning.
» = =
. THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Johnsons
And Joneses At Apollo
Oysters Grow on Trees In Film of Fantastic Borneo.
It's week at the
Apollo. The Jones family is more boisterous than Mr. and Mrs. Martin Johnson, but the Johnsons prove better show-
men. \ The Johnsons are in “Borneo,” fantastic land where oysters grow on trees and monkeys grow noses like Jimmy Durante’s. The Joneses, from oldest to youngest, are in “Hot Water,” The expedition to Borneo was Mr. Johnson's last before his death in an airplane crash on the Pacific Coast. It was an exciting climax to his life. Most of the excitement got into the film; indeed, the picture seems to have some excitement made especially for it. The Johnsons’ Borneo is a paradise of monkeys. As if there were not enough monkeys on the island, their expedition brought a couple over from nearby Sumatra, a couple of gibbons that bark “no, no, no” while romancing.
Capture Orang-Utan
family
Climax of the picture is the capture of a giant orang-utan after a
three-day chase through the tree tops of an equatorial jungle. Tele-| scopic lenses bring him to the screen full size and show his deter- | mined fight against human domina- | tion. The best photography of the picture, if you like that sort of thing, consists in close-up views of the anthropoid’s face. A great deal of the comedy relief is provided by the proboscis monkeys, whose noses start out to be elephant trunks. These animals defy the attempts of men to keep them in captivity. There are big monkeys and little ones. The John{son camera catches them all in interesting activity. Lew Lehr’s nar- | rative of their behavior, however, is | something less than funny. Along with the monkeys but much less interesting are the Borneo head-hunters, who turn out to be meek, almost cowardly, individuals whose only pictured activity getting drunk, again to the accompaniment of the Lehr brand of wisecracks.
Scenery Beautiful
There is a lot of beautiful jungle scenery and interesting photography of birds and animals at the | jungle water hole. Most of the narration is capably done by Lowell Thomas. Mrs. Osa Johnson, the widow of the naturalist, who plans to con- | tinue his work, seems to have de-
SHIRLEY'S BACK
IN 12) RSE
HOLLYWOOD, Aug. 28 (U. P.). —Shirley Temple was back, in Hollywood today from a Honolulu vacation, Several hundred children were at the dock to gre2t ihe child movie star disembarking from the
liner Maolo with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Temple. Proudly Shirley displayed a bowl with a Siamese fighting fish.
ELEANOR CLOSES EYES TO HEAR TAPS
| taps”
More Pupils
Expected at | Music Studio
Jordan Conservatory to Open Sept. | for Registration. Preliminary registrations
and inquiries today indicated an increase in enrollment at
the Arthur Jordan Conservatory of Music this winter. | Two thousand one hundred | students were enrolled last]
year. | The conservatory is to be open Sept. 1 for registration. College students are to enroll beginning Sept. 13. Instruction in the preparatory department and in applied music will begin Sept. 7. Newly added dormitory facilities for women in the Benjamin Harrison Memorial Homestead were expected to permit the largest freshman class for many years to be enrolled. The faculty for the fall term is to] consist of 70 teachers of music, dancing, speech and corrective speech and dramatic art, it was announced. All of last year's graduates have found employment, school officials said.
LEE PURDY HEADS CLUB FLOOR SHOW
Lee Purdy, whom Walter Win- | chell has acclaimed as ‘tops in | for 1937, is headlining the | current Plantation floor show. She | recently played a 14-week engage- | ment in New York. Others in the new show are Evelyn Poe, singer, and the Four Mc | Nallie Sisters, dancers. Both these |
acts came to the Plantation from | Chicago hotel engagements.
| cello.
is |
Benny Strong and his Southern- |
Times Special aires continue to provide music,
SATURDAY, AUG. 28 1937
Old Timers
HOLLYWOOD, Aug. 28. (U. P.).—Weber and Fields, old-time favorites of the show world, ended their long retirement today with a job in the movies. In their same makeup and costumes of a half a century ago, the 68-year-old comedians went to work on the picture “Blossoms on Broadway.”
Weber and Fields made their debut in New York's Bowery in 1876 as beer hall entertainers,
First Cellist Is Selected
Paulo Gruppe Named to Symphony by Sevitzky.
As first cellist of the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra this season, Fabien Sevitzky today named Paulo Gruppe, a concert artist Born in Rochester, N. Y. Mr, Gruppe entered the royal conserva tory at The Hague when he was 9, He later studied at the Hollander Musikschule in Berlin and at the Paris Conservatoire, He was a pupil
of Pablo Casals. He made extensive tours with the Tollefsen Trio and the Letz Quartet and was a concert artist with Pave lova's ballet. He has appeared as soloist with the London, New York, Chicago, Minneapolis, St. Louis, Seattle, Canton, O., and Quebec sym« phonies, the Kansas City Philharmonic Orchestra and the Munich Volksorchester, Mr. Gruppe plays a Guarnerius
1 NY RG
1045 Virginia Ave,
Tonight and Sunday
(0G Ld Le
DORIS WESTON « LEE DIXON « HUGH WANE DARWELL - ALLEN JENKINS - LARRY ADLER
EXTRA HIT IN
LYNN OVERMAN
HOLLYWOOD, Aug. 28.—At a preview of “Broadway Melody, of 1938,” Eleanor Powell kept her eyes closed durmg her dance routine. She feels that the sounds of her taps are most important thing, and she can concentrate better if she doesn’t watch the number, she explains.
Miriam § y nopkins ‘Woman Chases Man Tomorrow — Poneye Cartoon Janet redrin “A St GAYNOR MARC Plus! Star Cast
Ask
wonderful
the thousands who saw this
show yesterday-—it's knockout!
Midnight Show Tonite
This Week-End’s Best Attractions
en in love with a French domestic | Francis . i 1 S appears, part > > : : oe] p Pp of the “me | are coming eastward is Katharine | *: nu #
(Olympe Bradna) during the voy- in a blond wig, as roi age. She has been killed by a fall- | “Conquest.” iy Ter i epoun, Vm Sarted Ey an ROADWAY ajresdy hag checked ing timber during the fire, so “Pow- | Rathbone are the other principals. |\¢" ti" st oll Topaoa +L) In Sylvia Sidney, for ihe) sles dah” goes down with the ship. Joe May, the Austrian director Who | or wo 45th Sf thi Phe | Of many a melancholy film has been This brings us back to the trial.|is said to have “discovered” Mar- on WV: 4 h St. this season In the | with us several weeks now. Is she
manded no favoritism on the expe- | dition but to have done her share | of the work, of the photography and of the flying over jungles in the | camouflaged amphibian plane, scar- REX
At Your Neighborhood Theater
EAST SIDE
——— 114 E. Washington Double Feature Simone Simon
NORTH SIDE 30th at Northwestern Newly Decorated Two Ace Hits
NORTH SIDE
» St. Cl. & Ft. Wayne St ( la | r Double Feature .
Rochelle Hudson
The intercession of Queen Victoria |jene Dietrich, Emil Jannings and and the President of the United | Annabella. did the megaphoning. | States, in view of “Nuggin’s” work| This melodrama is adapted from | against the slavers, saves him for | the stage success, “Mazurka.” Quite |
| {
{ Theater Guild's bangup dramatiza- happy to be here? Well, she has
tion of “Jane Eyre.” gone to the pains of interior decoraAfter loitering here awhile in hope | ing an entire duplex apartment, has that a certain stage vehicle would | let the lease run fairly long and
Miss Tarreyton. It is well known by now that this story is based upon the historically authentic trial of one Alexander William Holmes for manslaughter in 1842. Mr. Holmes, who threw seven into the sea to save 30-odd, served six months and then went back to sea.
Cast Does Good Job
As impressive as the action is the performance of a notable cast. Mr. Cooper, who long since ceased to be the strong, silent cowboy of his early days, turns in another ex-
cellent job. Mr. Raft, as the blus- | Wiles upon a girl who turns out to | {be the heroine's daughter. He takes | {her to a dive where the former | | opera singer, who has “gone down | {and down,” is an entertainer. Seeing | | the musician with her daughter, she |
tering, Maj. Hoople-ish seaman, gives one of the best portrayals in his career. Miss Dee is charming, and does all the acting her part requires, and Miss Bradna confirms her earlier promises of ability. there are excellent bits by Tully Marshall (I dont now where he has been, either) and Joseph Schildkraut as a swaggering duelHarry Carey puts up his boots and saddles to be a ship's captain,
ast.
Then |
| sumptuously set in prewar Vienna, it | tells of a promising young opera { singer who gives up a career for | marriage. Later, when the husband goes to war, the wife meets a prominent musician,
Virtuoso Betrays Her
Not only does the villanious vir- | tuoso betray her, but he institutes
|a little clever blackmail when the | : As a result, the | | husband gets a divorce and custody |
| husband returns.
{of their small daughter.
|
{ rascally musician practicing his
| shoots and kills him.
{of the picture's time, the girl's | mother tells the whole story and is | freed.
SONJA HENIE
Years later we discover the same |
At her trial, which occupies much |
and Robert Warwick, Robert Cummings, Lucien Littlefield and little Virginia Weidler are other familiar names in the cast.
U.S. ASKS STARS FOR MORE MONEY
HOLLYWOOD, Aug. 28 (U. P).— Maureen O'Sullivan and Wendy Barrie, film stars, were asked by the Government today for more income | tax money, Liens filed in Federal Court asked $258 from Miss O'Sullivan for 1934 and $1400 from Miss Barrie for 1935.
‘BAD INFLUENCE
Albertina Rasch laughingly says that Ray Bolger is a bad influence on her ballet girls. She teaches them ballet routines for “Rosalie,” but during the rest periods they rush over to Mr. Bolger for tap dancing instruction.
CITIZEN DIETRICH
Marlene Dietrich does not forfeit her citizenship application by returning to Europe for a vacation. The star’s status remains unchanged as long as her trip abroad is under one year. She will be gone for three months only.
| TO RETURN HERE
| HOLLYWOOD, Aug. 28 (U. P).—| | Sonia Henie, who went into the | movies from the Olympic skating | | rinks, will sail from Europe aboard | | the Normandie next week, her | | friends in Hollywood were informed. | | The blond star, after making several | | pictures, is returning to Norway for a visit.
‘SILVER BIRTHDAY"
Director George Seitz has been megaphoning pictures for 25 years. He started with “The Perils of Pauline,” playing a part and directing at the same time.
li 9 8s
GARY COOPER GEORGE RAFT
SOULS ATSEA
Plus
“BLONDE TROUBLE"
and “MARCH OF TIME”
BE SURE AND SEE Lowell Thomas in THE MILK PARADE Plus MAMMOTH ROAD SHOW
And FIRST RUN PICTURE
KEITH'S THEATRE
ALL WEEK
SOUGLE FEATUR
| materialize, Gloria Swanson grace-| has steeled herself, apparently, not fully retired and went back to Klieg | to go back unless they make her.
There is talk in the air, moreover,
WHAT, WHEN, WHERE
APOLLO
with Mr. and Mrs.
“Borneo,” 4:26
tin Johnson at 11:20, 1:53
and 9:3 “Hot Water,” with the Jones lly, at 12:35. 3:08, 5:41, 8:14 and
Mar- . , 6:39 screen duties long enough to come
to Broadway and appear in it. Re-
name was among the first ladies of CIRCLE | the silent screen? That glamorous | | lady reappeared as the star of a
“Souls at Sea,” with Gary Cooper, . . George Raft and Frances Dee, at || new play in California the other 12:40. 3:53, 7:06 and 10:19, “Blond Trouble,” with Eleanore Whitney, Johnny Downs and Lynne A at 11:32, 2:45, 5:58 and 111.
| Broadway.
COOLED THE HEALTHFUL WAY!
LOEW'S
“Dead End,” with Sylvia Sidney and Joel McCrea, at 11, 1:45, 4:30, 7:20 and 10. “It Can't Last Forever.” with Ralph Bellamy, Betty Furness, Robert Armstrong and Raymond Walburn at 12:35, 1:25, 6:10 and 8:55.
LYRIC
“Confession,” with Kav Francis. at 11:25. 1:39, 3:53 6.0%. 8:21 and 10:35. Vaudeville, with Eddy Duchin’s crghasus, at 12:44, 2:58, 5:12, 7:26 and
OHIO
“Woman Chases Man.” with Miriam Hopkins and Joel McCrea. Also “Criminals of the Air,” with Rosalind Keith and Charles Quigley.
AMBASSADOR
“Platinum Blond,” with Jean Harlow. Also "Riding on Air.” with Joe E. Brown and Florence Rice,
ALAMO
“Trailin’ Trouble,” with Ken Mavnard. Also “I Cover the War,” with John Wayne.
LOEW'S GREAT NEW MOVIE SEASON STARTS with this ROMANTIC MASTERPIECE
Semuel Goldwyn's
SYLVIA SIDNEY JOEL McCREA WENDY BARRIE HUMPHREY BOGART : “DEAD END” KIDS
COMEDY! _ \IT CAN'T LAST \ FOREVER
\RALPH BELLAMY _\BETTY FURNESS
SWIM-DANCE WESTLAKE
PAUL COLLINS’ ORCHESTRA
Featuring JENNIFER SHEFFER Every evening except Monday
that Robert Montgomery has be- | | come enamored of a play with real, | live actors, that it is entitled “Mere- | ly Murder,” and that during the | next half-year he may forsake his |
ing head-hunters but not bothering | the orangs. The latest adventure of the Joneses | puts them noisily into politics with all the attendant troubles. (S. E. H.)
member Marjorie Rambeau whose |)
| day, preparatory to bringing it to]
Open-Air Saturday or Covered Sunday Convertible
SK HARBOR |
Sat., 60c couple before 9:30: 80¢ couple 9:30 to 12:00: 50c couple after 12:00. Sun. 35¢ couple before 9:15 50¢c Couple After 9:15
Dance
0 One Block South Municipal Airport
[4
COOL OZONIZED AIR Ea]
STAGE 1a Lh
@r1 Porsor
and his
[T3301
Direct From New York with his own
REVUE “SCREENS
KAY |
ȴ
a
e Middle W
and Only J NEW YORK’S SUPER FEATURE—ATTRACT
ION EXTRAORDINARY THE 10,000 DOLLAR BEAUTY—HELD OVER 8TH CONSECUTIVE WEEK
SUNYA (SMILES) SLANE
FOLLIES ~: DAY
Featuring a Battery of Fast Comedians— HARRY KAHLER — RAY JACK MOORE—WARREN CANDLER—ARTHUR WATTS and ERNEST CANDLER And A Youthful Singing and Dancing Chorus—Mimi Lynn Added Feature MAT. 2:15—TWO SHOWS AT NIGHT, 7:15 and 9 P. M.—CONTINUOUS ON SUN. GET UP _A PARTY AND ATTEND OUR FAMOUS MIDNIGHT SHOW TONIGHT
Show Tonight
M'CLELLAND
Stratford |
| Zaring
Randolph Seott—Frances Drake “AND SUDDEN DEATH” “PREVIEW MURDER MYSTERY” Sun. Double Feature—Martha Raye
Boh Burns (and his Bazooka) “MOUNTAIN MUSIC” “THE GO GETTER” INC Udell St. at Clifton U D ELL Double Feature Jed Prouty “BACK TO NATURE” “WILD CAT TROOPER” Sun. Double Feature—Leslie Fenton “HOUSE OF SECRETS” Loretta Young “RAMONA” Ga rrick Conrad Nagel “BANK ALARM” “NIGHT WAITRESS” Double Feature—Edw. G. Robinson “KID GALAHAD” “EAST MEETS WEST”
ME C CA Noble & Mass. Double Feature Ann Dvorak “RACING LADY” June Travis “MEN IN EXILE”
Sun.
30th and [Illinois Double Feature
Sun,
Double Feature—Astaire-Rogers “SHALL WE DANCE?” “CRIMINAL LAWYER”
19th & College Double Feature Grace Moore
“WHEN YOU'RE IN LOVE” “PAROLE RACKET” Sun. Double Feature—Joe E. Brown “WHEN'S YOUR BIRTHDAY” Jas. Cagney “GREAT GUY” Double Feature
DREAM aims
“THE DEVIL DIAMOND” “ARIZONA DAYS” Sun. Double Feature—Roseoe Karns “NIGHT OF MYSTERY” Gable-Loy “PARNELL” Double Feature
R TZ Gene Raymond
“THERE GOES MY GIRL” “THUNDER IN THE CITY” Sun. Double Feature—Marx Bros. “A DAY AT THE RACES” “CRIMINALS OF THE AIR”
2361 Station St,
filinols and 84th
Hol lywood essen am.
Double Feature Preston Foster “OUTCASTS OF POKER FLAT” “MAN WHO FOUND HIMSELF” Sun. Double Feature—Claudette Colbert “I MET HIM IN PARIS” “THERE GOES MY GIRL”
Central at Fall Crk. Double Feature Lee Tracy
“BEHIND THE HEADLINES” “WINGS OF THE MORNING” Sun. Double Feature—Dick Powell “THE SINGING MARINE” Jones Family “BIG BUSINESS”
C i nema 16th & Delaware Sts.
Double Feature Claire Trevor “KING OF THE GAMBLERS” “SECRET VALLEY” Sun. Double Feature—Roscoe Karns “MURDER GOES TO COLLEGE” Pat O’Brien “SLIM”
Continuous from 1:30
42nd & College Uptown ‘Same sais “VENUS MAKES TROUBLE” Boris Karloff “NIGHT KEY” Sun. Double Feature-—~Wallace Beery “SLAVE SHIP” Edw. E, Horton “OH! DOCTOR”
“SHE HAD TO EAT” “VENUS MAKES TROUBLE” Sun. Double Feature—Tony Martin “SING AND BE HAPPY” Gable-Loy “PARNELL”
Ta bott Air-Conditioned
Double Feature Preston Foster “OUTCASTS OF POKER FLAT” Gable-Loy “PARNELL” Sun. Double Feature—Anton Walbrook “THE SOLDIER AND THE LADY” “THERE GOES MY GIRL" EAST SIDE TY | 7% ye % i acoma James Melton “MELODY FCR TWO” “GUNS OF THE PECOS” Double Feature—Barbara Stanwyck “THIS IS MY AFFAIR” Pat O’Brien “SLIM”
Tuxedo 0 E. New York
402 Double Feature George Brent “THE GO GETTER” “CHAN AT THI OLYMPICS” Sun. Double Feature—Spencer Tracy “CAPTAINS COURAGEOUS” Edw. E. Horton “OH! DOCTOR”
TON 5507 E. Wash. St. | RVI NG Double Feature Warner Oland “CHAN AT THE OLYMPICS” “DRAEGERMAN COURAGE" Sun. Double Feature—Spencer Tracy “CAPTAINS COURAGEOUS” Pat O'Brien “SLIM” Comfortably Cool
Eme rson Doors Open 5:45
1—Walt Disney Academy Awards Revue 2-—Tony Martin “SING AND BE HAPPY” 3—"“CRIMINALS OF THE AIR" Starts Sunday—Marx Bros, “A DAY AT THE RACES” Richard Dix “DEVIL IS DRIVING”
Talbott & 22nd Westinghouse
Sun.
4630 E. 10th,
“~T 6116 E. Wash. St. Double Feature
GO LDEN Jack London's
“CALL OF THE WILD” “SONG OF THE CITY” Sun. Double Feature—Pinky Tomlin “SING WHILE YOU'RE ABLE” Gable-Loy “PARNELL”
Hami ton 2116 E. 10th St,
Double Feature Spencer Tracy “CAPTAINS COURAGEOUS” “WOMAN IN DISTRESS” Sun. Double Feature—Kay Francis “ANOTHER DAWN” Pat O’Brien “SLIM” St rand First City "Neighbor. hood Showing Saturday and Sunday The Marx Brothers “A DAY AT THE RACES” Joe E. Brown—Guy Kibbee “RIDING ON AIR” Continuous Matinee Sunday Mon., Tues., Wed.—Richard Dix “DEVIL IS DRIVING” Sylvia Sidney “STREET SCENE”
p r mo N t oy ra a a u Rosalind Keith “CRIMINALS OF THE AIR” “ACES AND EIGHTS” Sun. Double Feature—Claudette Colbert “I MET HIM IN PARIS” “CHAN AT THE OLYMPICS”
Follow THE TIMES Daily Neighborhood Directory
for your favorite programs
“SEVENTH HEAVEN" “MAN FROM NEW MEXICO” Sun, Double Feature—Virginia Bruce “WHEN LOVE IS YOUNG” “THE DEVIL'S PLAYGROUND”
RI VOLI 3155 E. 10th St.
Doors Open at 5:48 Double Feature
Comfortably Cool Jessie Matthews “HEAD OVER HEELS IN LOVE” “WINGS OVER HONOLULU” EXTRA! Last Show Tonight Only! Wm. Powell “RENDEZVOUS” Sun. Double Feature—Warner Baxter “SLAVE SHIP” “SHE HAD TO EAT”
WEST SIDE Belmont W. Wash. & Belmond
Westinghouse Double ‘
Air-Conditioned Feature Joe E. Brown ‘RIDING ON AIR” “TWO-FISTED SHERIFF” Sun. Double Feature—Marx Bros, “A DAY AT THE RACES” “NEW FACES OF 1937”
DA SY 2540 W, Mich, St.
Double Feature May Robson “WOMAN IN DISTRESS” “TWO-GUN LAW” Sun. Double Feature—Dick Powell “THE SINGING MARINE” “WE HAVE OUR MOMENTS" Howard & Blaine Double Feature Rosalind Keith
Howard
“FIND THE WITNESS” “RANGER COURAGE" Sun. Double Feature—Spencer Tracey “THEY GAVE HIM A GUN" “WAY OUT WEST"
STATE ‘ah oui
Double Featurs Buck Jonea “California Straight Ahead” “MIGHTY BARNUM" Sun, Double Feature—Wallace Beery “THE SLAVE SHIP" “THERE GOES MY GIRL"
SOUTH SIDE
O 1 t Ne Meridian r en a Chester Morris “THE BAT WHISPERS" “JOIN THE MARINES” Sun. Double Feature—Spencer Tracy “THEY GAVE HIM A GUN" “WITH LOVE AND KISSES"
-
FE = East at Lincoln Double Feature
Li NCco | nN Barton McLain “DRAEGERMAN COURAGE” “CODE OF THE RANGE” Double Feature—Wallace Beery “GOOD OLD SOAK” “NIGHT MUST FALL” Fountain Square Our New Cooling System Keeps You Comfortably Cool Alwavs Double Feature Lew Avres “LAST TRAIN FROM MADRID” Gene Autry “OH! SUZANNA” Sun. Double Feature—Marx Bros, “A DAY AT THE RACES” “BEHIND THE HEADLINES”
CE —————_———————————— At Fountain Square
Sa Nn de rs Double Feature
Doris Nolan “TOP OF THE TOWN" “MEN IN EXILE” Double Featnre—Claudette Colbert “I MET HIM IN PARIS" “J PROMISE TO PAY” Double Feature
Ava lon Buck Jones
“LEFT HANDED LAW” “SINNER TAKE ALL” Sun, Double Feature—Jeaneite MacDonald Nelson Eddy-—John Barrymore “MAYTIME"” “You Can't Get Away With It”
Sun,
—- — Pros. & Churchman
