Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 November 1937 — Page 4
PAGE 12
Meredith's New Role in Slapstick Unreasonable; Detective Film Praised
Hollywood Moguls’ Action in Casting Young Actor In Ordinary Frivolous Comedy Showing at Circle Theater Is Puzzling.
By JAMES THRASHER Sometimes the deep reasoning of Hollywood's film moguls passeth understanding. One puzzling instance is the appearance of Burgess Meredith in z harmless and stereotyped bit of fluff called “There Goes the Groom,” which is the Circle's second picture this week. With harmless and stereotyped ©
bits of fluff, as such, 1 have NO | get» to the screen and scored an un-
quarrel. It's useless and a little | qualified SUCCESS. ungrateful to get mad at the movie | ~ «phere Goes the Groom” is his makers today. In fact, it's a bit like | second picture. It is one of the slapshaking your fist at a cyclone. stick comedies that Hollywood is | Movies are made for popular en- | grinding out by the dozens this year. | tertainment, and with the sole end geome of them have been good, but | in view of making money. Smart | this doesn't happen to be one of | producers take no precious views of | them. the films as an art form. They are Certainly Mr. Meredith is not - the producers’ bread and butter. high and mighty that I or anyone What the public likes it gets. | else would object to his playing light In the course of this mammoth | comedy. His current New York play, | speculation in personalities, stories Mr. Anderson's “The Star Wagon,” | and situations, we come upon a good has its lighter moments. many memorable experiences, It is | . not necessary to name over the | Won High Praise great pictures of the last few sea- | But what is hard to reconcile is his being cast in this particular |
song to remind vou that it is possible to make both money and a real | farce. Here we have a person of rare | | gifts. His first screen appearance
artistic contribution to our enjoyment. has won high praise and has done | fairly well at the box-office. So, | All this doesn’t explain Mr. Mere- | for a follow-up, he is cast in somedith’s presence. Burgess Meredith | thing that any second-string player : ...., | might have done. happens to be, according to critical | 1won't say that the second-string-and audience opinion, the best of ler would have done as well. For | our young American crop of actors. | Mr. Meredith lavishes as much of | Though comparatively new in the | his talent on the feeble part as it theater, he has shown himself pos- | will hold. Its most stringent his- | sessed of a good voice and tech- | trionic demands, however, are that nique, versatility, sensitivity and the actor pretend he has amnesia, | the true actor’s temperatment that | put his finger in his mouth and | moves the audience and makes it | yell and, finally, fall into a pool of | believe him, icy water with the heroine and Now, every good dramatic actor | emerge locked in the inevitable and | cannot transfer his art to the sound | final embrace. stage. But Mr. Meredith brought his It's like casting Alfred Lunt role in Maxwell Anderson's “Winter- | support of Jane Withers.
Scored in ‘Winterset’
in
Double Bill Fare Shows Improvement
Edmund Lowe plays another detective role in “Murder on Diamond Row.” the second feature at Loew's this week, The movie is an adaptation of a story from the prolific pen of the late Edgar Wallace, | From the billing which the picture receives you may assume rightly * ul bot NI that it is another Class B picture. ow fe rom ex-convicts work- | But youll find It somewhat more When the thief refuses to sell at |
enjovable than the mine-run type of |
ie which ™m jes most fea his price, the Squeaker betrays him | TYE heh XY HEWES Ts “| to Scotland Yard. As a result both ture attractions.
. on | Scot yard and the underworld | Since the double feature evi Scotiang ¥ Be qd : s : seems destined Oo OI SE Mr. Lowe decides to investigate what permanent part of the i 961 91 Lith gentleman. A suitable criminal picture scene, we may well wish for record is invented and he gets a
more entertainment of this sort. | : “ ueaker's | Naturally it isn’t the tvpe of show | Rh Sutton, ‘the ‘Squeak
that one thinks about after leaving | “ “ the theater, But you'll find your- | Corpse ‘Gets ‘Confession self guessing at the conclusion. That | recommendation can’t be made for | knows that Sutton and the Squeak- | most “filler” pictures, with their er are the same individual. Mr. conventional cut and dried plot for- | Lowe is unable to prove anything | mulas. | however until Sutton murders vel : | of his accomplices. Audience Knows From First Sutton breaks down and confesses | when confronted with the corpse, | after the bullying tactics of the police have aroused him to the de- | sired. state of emotional agitation. The usual happy ending finds Lowe in complete triumph, for he has not only caught the Squeaker and regained his job—he has also won
Of course the audience already
As you probably know if you have read or seen many mystery stories, their plots as a rule follow two dis- | tinet trends. In one type, the murderer isn't divulged until the end. In the other type, the reader or the spectator is “in the know” all along, the element of surprise being the detectives procedure. The movie | Suttons girl. at Loew's in question proceeds along| Edmund Lowe the latter lines. | suave Inspector Barrabal, but his Edmund Lowe is cast as a Scot-| Yankee accent is very noticeable | land Yard inspector who, after| with so many Britishers in the cast. | drinking himself out of his job, is| Alastair Sim is excellent in a bit seeking another chance. His rein-| pari as the inspector's reporter statement is dependent upon his, friend. success in apprehending a my s- | You should enjoy this one whethterious character, the Squeaker, who | er you're an avid reader of detective buvs stolen jewelry at ridiculously fiction or not. (C. GC), |
Miss Swarthout to Make : Bloomington Appearance
Gladys Swarthout, popular opera, picture and radio star, is to appear in Bloomington Friday night as the third attraction on the Univer
sity and City Music Series, ®
ro operon Chang: who | STUDIO REPORTS NEW COLOR IDEA
was to have sung Dec 7. The not ed Russian -basso’s entire American tour has been canceled because of illness, HOLLYWOOD, Nov. 20 (U, P.).— Though still young, Miss Swarth- | wi ; 3 cut has a lengthy record of expe- Fo HVies ’bparently ‘des rience which includes engagements | ned for as wide a use as the with the Chicago Civic and Metro- | talkies, a new color process today politan Opera ey Fu | was reported developed by Columbia concert tours, sponsored and guest : : radio appearances and three motion | Motion Picture Studio. Its details pictures. Her fourth film, “Romance | oe Secret. in the Dark.” is to be released soon. First use of the new process, said John Boles and John Barrvmore are | (0 reproduce colors in very natural the chief supporting players. (tints, will be in the Grace Moore Miss Swarthout has been singing picture “I'll Take Romance.” The | professionally since she was 13. Pog. |Drcv cw Was held up so that the sessing w voice which developed | NC Process could be used. early, she pinned up her curls, | If pronounced successful, Columsought out ® choirmaster, told him Di® May use it extensively. she was 19, and got the job, | get After several seasens in Chicago opera, Miss Swarthout joined the Metropolitan seven years ago. She made her debut in “La Gioconda,” and since then has sung all the important mezzo roles in the Italian and French repertory.
2 ARE INJURED IN ACCIDENT ON SET
HOLLYWOOD, Nov. 29 (U, P)) — John Howard Payne and Martha | Rave both limped today as a result
is a sufficiently |
OLAND AND WIFE AGREE ON TERMS
HOLLYWOOD, Nov. Warner Oland, actor, film role of Charlie Chan, the Chinese detective, and his estranged | | wife, Edith, were agreed today on | an out-of-court settlement giving Mrs, Oland $2200 a month separate | maintenance, {
The wife also gets half their $274,« 000 community property, attorneys | announced in withdrawing Mrs. of a movie set accident. Payne was | Oland's separate maintenance suit
supposed to pick up the wide- | in Santa Barbara Superior court. mouthed actress for a scene in “Col-
BDU. Pla who plays the |
|
lege Swing.” He slipped and fell CANINE LUCK
with her, Payne was barefoot and | Cora Witherspoon
one of his toe nails was jerked off. | named “Lucky” that knows and is | | known by more stage celebrities | than most actors. He has a collec- | tion of photographs autographed to | him.
ENGLISH —Tonigh, Tues., Wed. SAM M. MARIS presents
has a dog
Miss Raye suffered a Sp ankle,
NEW PUPIL
Leatrice Joy Gilbert, who is going into her first screen role in “Benefits Forgot,” has joined the school for juvenile players at Metro-Goldwyn- |
oe STAGE
LTT N.Y. MUSIC BOX COMEDY MIT BY GEORGE 8 KAUFMAN anc’ EONA FERBER.
TODAY TOMORROW
PAUL MUNI POCRATES" JACK BENNY , ARTIST
AND MODEL "
RS LOVELIEST nr
a NT 10, X1.65, $2.20, $2.79,
MAT. 550-81.10-$1.65 |
{up the chimney,
| quently,
| listen to lies about
Jeanette MacDonald is shown here with her sereen-actor hushand,
Gene Raymond, attending the Los Angeles opening of which will be Loew's next attraction.
star, supported by Alan Jones,
“The Firefly,” Miss MacDonald is the picture's
IN NEW YORK ==, eeorce ross
There Is a Santa Claus—He Banquets Store Santas Each Christmas Day.
EW YORK, Nov. 29.—Pre-Yuletide Spirit Note: Arrangements already
have been completed to feed Santa Claus on Christmas Day in the | great wassail hall of the Hotel McAlpin.
It is an annual feast in honor of the multiple Xris Kringles who hitch their reindeers to the department stores and charity wards, and therefrom derive their seasonal | livelihood. For many years these
benevolent Santa Clauses were left | out of the convivial fun on Christ- |
mas Day, And their identities went when their work was done. About three years ago, John J.| Woelfle, who runs the MeAlpin, | thought it high time Santa Claus | | was included in the holiday spirit. | So he sent out a blanket invita-| tion to all professional Kringles in town and asked them in to dine with | him. He has made the banquet an | annual institution. And so the]
| Santas of the toy and novelty de- ‘broke
partments are not without a Mr. Claus of their own, even if Mr. Woelfle doesn’t don the traditional disguise,
INCE he became a Long Island squire a year ago, little is seen of Jimmy Walker or his wife, the | erstwhile Betty Compton, in Manhattan's after-dark ciubs. They lead the night life infre- | and when they do, it is generally never beyond a reasonably
| early hour.
New York's ex-mavor seems to
prefer the zany Jack White over all | | other night club entertainers. White
also was the Walker favorite court jester even while Jimmy was .entrenched at City Hall. Incidentally, a Sunday gazette re= vived old times recently by splashing the news over the front page
| about Walker's having turned up 20
| minutes late for a wedding in which | he had the par i gt man!
Sot ALLEN'S Charlie MeCarthy: and a yard wide. And mistaking this corner for another conducted by Ruth ig | Ralph Watkins wants to know one were playing the host to Helen Morgan, would it be correct to sug=
S ‘description of All wood |
| gest that she draw up a piano and
sit down? Joan Edwards observes that only time Broadwayites will ever themselves—=is when they are being praised.
WHAT, WHEN, WHERE
APOLLO
for a King, with Joe BE. She sg Mack, 12.54,
“tain of he Devil,” with Ricardo Cort and Sally Eilers at 11:38, aan 5:56 9:05
CIRCLE
“Ebb Tide,” with Oscar Homolka, Frances Farmer and Ray giana, at 12:38 3:48, 6:58 and 10:0 “There Goes the Sra with Burgess Meredith, Ann Sothern and Mary Boland, at 11:33, 2:43, 5:53
ENGLISH'S
“Stage Door,” by George 8 man and Edna Ferber Bennett, Curtain at
INDIANA
“A Damsel in Distress, Astaire, George Burns, oe Ray Noble, at 12:39, 3:48,
T rauble, » iy ith 2:48, 5
“Fit
0 own nt 3,
Kaufstarring Joan 0.
" with Fred Gracie Allen 6:53,
the 53, 9.
“Borrowing
Jones family, at 11:
KEITH S
re Thternationate.” on stage, at 1:30, 4, 50,
“The MB of ‘Ranta Fe” with Norman Ne wii Nina Quartaro, at 12, 2:3 5 9:50. 10:20. LOEW'S Sacred.” Sith P'redrie
arole Lombard, Charles and Te Connolly, at
“Nothin March, Winninger 1:45 4.30,
11 8, “Murder in Diamond Row.” with Fdmund Lowe, at 12:25, 3:10, 8.55,
LYRIC
Little Jack Little A oh orchestra on stage, at 1, 3 0:30, “The Ny “Wionde with end Farrell and Barton MacLane, 1 120, 5:19, 8:09, 10:30
OHIO “Artists and Models,” with Jack Benny and Gail Patrick, Also “Dr. Nocrates,” with Paul Muni and Ann Dvorak. AMBASSADOR “That Certain Woman,” with Bette Davis and Henry Fonda. Alzo “Wine, 0 and Horses,” with Ann Sher=
idan, ALAMO
“Texas Trail,” with Alto “All Over Town,’ and Johnson,
William Bovd with Olsen
instead of down, -
the |
—— —— a | SS
“
Every time Du. Montgomery | sees a nice press clipping about | | himself, he invariably turns to | friends and asks petulantly, “What's | wrong with me?” ¥ % % misfortune often and becomes
turns
iL YOW luck
f 1 about (charm unto its victims Al Donahue has
a
ter investigated. (He submits this evidence: The Wright brothers might never have experimented with planes if] they had not failed with a newspaper they published. H. G. Wells felt pretty badly when lhe was forced to leave his job as lelerk in a dry goods store after he his leg. His misfortune {urned lout to be his good fortune, for in the year he was confined to his bed he | developed a writing talent. No less a mishap than a five-year prison sentence for embezzlement turned O’'Henry to a writing life, | In the musical world Haydn fancied himself a singer until he overs= ‘heard the Bmpress of Austria remark, “Young Haydn sings like a | row. He was dismissed from the | leourt after that calamitous libel and | while he sulked, he took to compos= ing. And the world is glad he did. ” » » NE of the reasons why actors and actresses who work | with Gertrude Lawrence are devoted to her is because, at least once a week, she invites her coplay= ers to a midnight supper, and she ingizts upon being hostess to all, in= cluding the walk-on, every Sunday | night. This, in the theater, where the star looks down from lofty heights upon those in the supporting cast, is rare comaraderie,
Neophytes in ‘Stage Door’
Stormed Casting Office.
Six dramatic schools, 10 colleges land a long list of “little theater” [groups will be represented in the | |cast of “Stage Door,” which, with | Joan Bennett as the star, is to [open a three-day engagement at | English’s tonight. | And the young actresses, alumnae (of the above institutions, almost | [are “playing themselves” in the | play. Their roles are those of | aspiring stage neophytes who reside | in ' a theatrical boarding house called the Footlights Club. They were chosen from a group of nearly 500 applicants who stormed the offices of Sam H. Harris, the play's | producer, when casting began the spring of 1936. [ From these applicants were chosen [the 18 “inmates” for the New York | production and a like number [or | the present touring company Most, | lof the 500 were interviewed per= | sonally by Edna Ferber and George | [8. Kaufman, coauthors of "Stage | | Door.” | The company comes to Tndianap|olis from a week in Cincinnati, and will proceed to Chicago, where the [tour is to close. The “road” engagements have been curtailed because of Miss Bennett's previous Alm commitments, Local will include a Wednesday matinee,
HIGH MARK Pete Smith completed his 104th one-reel picture with “Romance of | Radium.”
ne INDIANAPOLIS TIMES GENE SEES WIFE'S NEW FILM
is a mat- |
the |
Roles Given Actresses Who |
in |
performances |
Driver Ruins
SATIRIZES "DANCE IMPRESARIOS
Buildup for
Movie Star
Martha Raye Ordered to Stop Entertaining Free In Clubs.
By PAUL HARRISON
HOLLYWOOD, Nov. 29—Shoit takes: Stalking out of a noisy cock- | tail party the other evening, a dow- | ager of the stage remarked: “Hollywood is a place where the veneer comes off easily—with a little alcohol.” A publicity stunt missed fire (he other day when a couple of photographers went to the home of an lactress to snap her in the act of making, with her own lily-white | hands, a big cake for her husband's | birthday. There was a long delay, ended finally when a caterer’s truck pulled up to the house and a man dashed in with the cake. Hard-pressed for an item the other day, Betty Grable's press agent con- | cocted this one: “Miss Grable has been in motion pictures eight years, | has appeared in countless films, but never has seen herself on the screen.” | Martha Raye's studio has sternly forbidden her to do any free enter= taining in night clubs, but it can’t stop her. Lately she has been | haunting an obscure little spot in downtown Los Angeles. Paramount heard about it when police had vo go to the place to handle Lhe crowds.
RETO
TT ET
Round About
Dining at the Beverly Derby, | Fred Astaire was unable to catch | the eye of Fred Perry, seated only [about 20 feet away. So Astaire | ordered a table telephone, called his | home and instructed his butler to [eall Perry at the restaurant and | tell him that Astaire wanted him to | join him at his table, After going to half a dozen par-| | ties and being incorrectly dressed, | Peter Arno has figured out an all-| | purpose costume for Hollywood. The | suit will be reversible—formal on] - one side, with detachable tails, and | | tweed on the other. Under this | | he'll wear a bathing suit. You haven't seen anything funny until you see Mae West's colored | | maid, Daisy, give an impersonation | lof her employer. | Charles Farrell is taking contracts | and will return to the American | screen for the first time in two | NEW YORK. Nov. | years, jase of | John Montague himself isn't likely | when the Second American Artists’ to appear in pictures, but two | at Carnegie Hall Dee. 17. | studios are preparing scripts based Large-scale Government | on his story, lof art production, introduced in Notre Dame's former grid star, | this country for the first time | Nick Lukats, is being groomed as through the New Deal, a cowboy crooner, | widely acclaimed results, according [to Stuart Davis, Congress executive | secretary. Among those cited by Mr. Davis as offering enthusiastic in= dorgement of the Federal Art Proj- | training as a new sensation. She's ant are Hendrik Willem Van Loon, | red-haired, shapely and beautiful, 8 | whose new book, “The Arts.” is on former manicurist discovered by an pegt.geller lists; Lewis Mumford, executive whose hands she groomed. | ...thor and art critic: John Taylor Now she's spending part of her | Arms, Society | days before the test cameras, the president; R®ekwell rest of her time in sessions with | Weber and many | the same drama teacher who's | guished artists. | coaching Simone Simon. “Notwithstanding progressively Bette Davis says she'll never make | higher achievements by artists | another picture during football sea= working under Government patron- { son. She and Bing Crosby are the | age,” Mr, Davis said, "the program colony's most avid fans, has been restricted in response to Those parties given by the Basil big business demands for retrench= | Rathbones have reached such pro- ment in Government expenditures, portions that there'll be an or-| With hundreds of artists thrown off | chestra pit at one end of the draw- | WPA and left destitute, and the | ing room in the new house they're morale of those remaining seriously building. impaired by the constant threat of Buddy Rogers and Mary Pickford | further layoffs.” can't agree on plans for a new | home, and they're living now in a rented house in Brentwood. Jane Withers is selling magazine | the case of A. subscriptions to people on the lot.| York artist who has just sold a Trying to earn some extra Christs | canvas to the Metropoiitan Miiseuim mas money, of Art. In an interview following | Cary Grant always carries pockets | announcement of the purchase. Mr full of tricks—mechanical mice and | Baylinson denied that "an artis J | the like. And any gal who tries to good enough for the Metropolitan | borrow the handerchief from his | must be good enough to make a live | breast pocket finds that it's 15 feet | INR without support from the Gov= | long. ( ernment.’ | Irony note: One of the most fre- | He put the case in just the oppoquent jobs of Hollywood stunt men | site day. Being down-and-out until | is wrecking and overturning cars, WPA came along, he pointed out, They calculate everything in ad- Government employment gave him | vance and almost always escape | the assurance to paint with a new without a scratch. The other day, | 7est and thus to produce a canvas though, Ivan Cedar, veteran stunt- | tha’ found favor with the Metro | er, slapped at a bee while driving | politan Museum. his own car in Arizona. He lost Back Federal Bill control, died of his injuries With new tunes and new story,| Berenice Abbott, whose od “Sally, Irene and Mary” will be graphs of “Changing New York” jE like the silent version or the have proved a great popular ik original stage musical. “They've . | changed evervthing but the title” cess on exhibit at the Museum of observed Fred Allen, “and I hear | the City of New York, also empha= Zanuck's calling conferences to de- sized that her project had lan- | cide whether to take the comma out | guis shed for lack of patronage until | of that. [taken up by the Government through the WPA At the fortheaming Congress, the | Federal Arts Bill will be hailed by Philip Evergood, New York Artisis’ | Union president, as the best answer to the artist's minimum needs for
Because she couldn't even get dance study in Europe, Dorothy
ment that began this week. When chances for a job were depicting her visits to the variou the idea. Now she has added a sa
Timez Npecial
29
Secret Sensation
Watch for a girl named Arleen | | Whalen, whom 20th-Fox is secretly |
Max distin-
Kent, other
quate even for the highly recognized | | artists was said to be indicated by |
BRENT RECEIVES MIS FINAL PAPERS
HOLLYWOOD, Nov. 20 (U, P). | George Brent, film leading man, was an American citizen today, He re= | | nounced allegiance to his native Ireland and obtained final citinen= | ship papers yesterday from Federal | Judge William P. James,
HATS BROKEN IN'
Clark Gable has a stand-in who | wears Gable's new hats for a week, | to break them in,
- | 3 The Jones Fond
{0 LL {LTV TROUBLE
Starting Friday! The Surprise Hit of the Year!
Watch for Announcement in Thursday's Newspapers!
. 4 LAST DAYS!
| I. m PERSON
EN (Halil
Ricardo Cortez, Sally Ellers in
ing descriptions in motion of the Spanish war, and a pantomime portrait of Adolf Hitler Strolling in the park
Hundreds of prominent artists will put the future of American art
»
support
has brought |
of American Btehers |
That private patronage is inade- |
8. Baylinson, New |
JSARRICK
| Stratford
a job in the chorus after years of Fox, 8t. Louis socialite, turned to
terpeichorean satire and won herself a New York night ¢lub engage-
slim, Miss Fox made up a dance 8 chorus directors, Someone liked tirical account of a world tow. givan adventure in Paris
Artists to Ask Continued Support by Governmen
the squarely up to the Government congress convenes in public = gession
eecurity and the conditions fostering the highest quality of production. Introduced last summer in House of Representatives, the
the
zational support, It has been indorsed by the C. I. O, Negro Congress, the New Teachers’ Union and other groups Labor's Nonpartisan League has placed it on its legislative program and expects to have it introduced into the Senate during the present
session,
Embracing the arts of the theater, music and dance as well, the bill is being actively supported by workors in those fields. Leopold Godowsski, Roy Harris and Aaron Conland are among musicians who have indorsed it. George Biddle will also speak on he need for permanent Government support of art at the open session, In the closed sessions, Holger Cahill, National Director of the Federal Art [Froject, will give his views oh Gov=
York
the National |
MONDAY, NOV. 29, 1937
(
WPA Music Ensembles Set Concert
Second Faculty Recital at Jordan Scheduled Wednesday.
The Federal Music diana is to present Pp. m. tomorrow in | Community Building. Participants | will be the WPA Concert Band, the music project's Negro male quintet and the Mothers’ Chorus of School 54. Music by Brahms, Kreisler, Lithgow, Strauss Dvorak and Sousa is included in the band's program. In addition there is to be community singing led by Ruby Kerr, with Ruth Smith as accom panist,. | #”
Project of Ine a concert at 8 the Brookside
Schubert
on ”
| The second of a series of Wednes= | day night recitals by Jordan Cons | servatory faculty members will be | held this week in Odeon Hall, The [hour is 8:30 p. m. Performers are (to be James Hosmer, flutist, and Jules Balkin. violist | Mr. Salkin's part | will include a first performance of | the “Valse Espana’ by Podnos. He also will play own franseriptions of Debissv's Bean and the “Perpetuum Mobile” of Novacek, | and sonatas by Brahms and Waassi« lenko { Mr. Hosmer. with Dorothy er accompanving | Flute Sonata by Bach, and the “Poeme”’ of C. T. Griffes Marie Zorn is to be Mr. Salkin's collabora« tor at the piano
of the recital
his
Ng Soir
Mungs= the frst
will piay
” ” ”
The 8t. Louis tra has announced the eng of the de Basil Ballet Russe for four | performances beginning Friday, Jan | 7 There are to be two performs | ances the following da: Of the 13 ballets to he presented, five will be seen in the Missouri city for the first time I'hese include | Pokine'’s new fantasy on Rimskvs Korsakov': opera hallet le Coq d'Or”; Tschaikowsky' Francesca da Rimini The Gods Go A-Begs [ ging, with music of Handel arranged by Bir Thomas Beecham; "Jeux dEnfantes to Bizet’: of | same title and Hundred | Kisses,” music by Frederic d'Brl= angel | Revivals production: Fantastique Bird” and de Cornered Hat
TRIPLE TUTORING
takes minging les Brice and Sophie her own personal Edens,
Svmphony Orchens
agement
music the
The
inchide three maior Berlioz Svmphony insky's Fire “The Three=
will
Strat Falla
8
bill | has been gaining widespread organi- |
Judy Garland sons from Fanny Tucker, as well as coach, Roget
|
ernment patronage, and Lynd Ward |
emphasize the campaign | permanent Government support as an integral part of the struggle [against 1 reaction.
[will
ART IN REVERSE
After carefully selecting a special
| blue-and-white patterned wallpaper | for
her bedroom, Rosalind Russell returned home to And the paperhangers had hung it upside down.
for |
RIES DR) ORCHESTRA
} oBIG ACTS
Presentation at Your
od Theaters
a
Tonight's Neighborho ROUTH SIDE B77 ' Beech Grove GROVE | lho “BAC sonis TIHIN TOF a Pro . Churehman AVALON “hohe Fess gy APTAINE COUR Fa KY TFIGHTING n AY / 105 N. Y ian ORIENTAL "faa FEF Jack ie RROARING Timmer UNCOLN Eh i: Ny nig Yor Ry RY ABLE 02 shelby New Garfield pm, Tai Constaee noi HH Eren FOUNTAIN SQUARE Double To ymom GLORY Aviva sidney “DEAD END” At Fountain Nauare SANDERS "noumiesiniure Jones rami HOF TER" NORTH SIDE Talbott and 22nd TALBOTT fouls Cowes “LOST A
THE GIRL oto; NO" ath at Nogiirwostern
R E X Kpeeial Featn
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MECCA Noble and Mass,
Double Feature Fdward Arnold YTOART OF NE ¥dw. F. Morton "O
YORK" i Yc TOR" 1h and College Dauhle Feature Kenny Baker TAKEN THE ATR “ROAD CR" Nn 281 Fa gion ". D R E A M Doable Feature wre RROADWAY MEL " nu ADO DRUMMOND COMES BACK’
R | T Z Minois and 34th
Donhle Feature Maureen O'Sullivan “MY DEAR MISS ALDRICH" Spencer Tracy "BIG
ory” Hollywood
1500 Roosevelt “LOST
ouhle Feature onald Colman HORIZON" WERER FLASH CANEY” - a Central at Fall Crk, ZARING Double Feature =~ yeti , Colbert "“y MET “ANNA
rou A RAL ore CINEMA
ponn John King
Feature Durbin
“Talk of the Devil”
AST”
218 Fs nfl 30
SIDE
NORTH 2nd and Colleges Double Feature
UPTOWN Ritz Brothers
“LIVE BEG INS IN COLLEGE" Gen. Sanders "LANCER SPY"
ST. CLAIR BL CL & Ft. Wa
Rouble Feature "LOST
hald Colman HORIZON = "IT CAN'T LAST FOREVER" | EAST SIDE 1 BE. Wash
i Double Feature Pohbhy Bisen
Peroment
"MR
BI1JOU
May Hobson “WOMAN IN DISTHESR HAPPY
KE WisH" popH 7 Ak 5 THY
111 E. Washington Double Yeatire
AIR
Hy
| RING AND HAS EK. 10th Nt Dosra Open 5 45
RIVOLI foal Ry" ford Won
"BRIDE REY “BACK IN CIRC AFTON
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| Double Feature | | THINK FART,
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