Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 December 1937 — Page 16
True Confession” Turns
Out Jolly Pack of Lies; ‘Stand-In’ Satirizes Films
John Barrymore ‘Mugs’ ~ To Trouping Heart's Content.
“True Confession,” the main at-
traction at the Indiana this week, is a pack of lies. Someone evidently got the titles mixed. But that should not in any way interfere with your enjoyment of it. Carole Lombard was never better; Fred MacMurray is just;as pleasing as he always was, and John Barrymore has the opportunity to “mug” through a juicy supporting role to his heart’s content. “True Confession” concerns itself with the difficulties of a young
married couple—really more--the'
husband's difficulties, for he is a young lawyer who feels strongly ‘about honesty and truth and he has married a girl addicted to lying. She just can’t help it—she says. And she’s right—sometimes. They are struggling along on what Mr. MacMurray is able to make defending people who are innocent and what she earns trying to sell lurid tales of romance to unencouraging publishers.
Knows No Stenography
When the butcher begins to get nasty about his bill, Miss Lombard breaks her promise and takes a job as a private secretary; $50 for three hours a day; five days a week. of course, there proves to be more to the job than shorthand and typing, of which, incidentally, she knows nothing. She finishes her first and last day’s work by punching her employer in the stomach and running away. Returning with help to get her coat, hat and purse, she finds her boss murdered and herself suspected of the crime. Her husband believes her guilty and she agrees with him when he explains that it would be easy to get her off with a plea of guilty of murder in self-defense. . This is the lie that causes all the trouble. For eventually a man who knows the real murderer appears to blackmail Helen, She can’t go to Ken, her husband, for help because ho will discover her fib and feel his ethics have been violated in defending a person guilty of perjury. Baby Saves Marriage But Ken enters just the right moment and with a little legal reasoning and some strongarm stuff, manages to persuade the blackmailer that his evidence is apt to prove retroactive. : By this time Ken is fed up with his wife's lying and decides to leave her. To save herself she tells him that she is going to have a baby. And he is taken in once again—for the moment. “But we could,” she reasons, and all ends well. There is a lot of delightful nonsense sandwiched in the story and its broad farce is handled capably by everyone concéffied. Miss Lombard is getting to be quite good at this sort of thing. Mr. Barrymore, as Charlie, the slightly crazy blackmailer, is so much at home in the part that he- will probably have a hard time living it down. “True Confession,” deceiving as the title may be, is unconditionally recommended for those who can see the point of a funny story and who enjoy laughing at the very human * errors of their kind. (L. H)
SUEDE PREFERRED
. Practically all of Jeanette MacDonald’s winter sports wardrobe consists. of suede. She has purchased five suede jackets, two suede skirts, and a bolero dress of suede.
I Mickey Rooney Outshifies Substitute for Freddie.
Inspired, perhaps, by the famous line, “they- also serve who only stand and wait,” Walter Wanger is taking cracks at his profession in “Stand-In,” which is one-half of Loew’s bill this week. The other segment of the double bill intrdouces Ronald Sinclair, who took Freddie Bartholomew's place in the saddle for “Thoroughbreds Don’t Cry,” a racing story which also features Mickey Rooney, Judy Garland, Sophie Tucker and C. Aubrey Smith. “Stand-In” features Leslie Howard and Joan Blondell in a rather exaggerated view of Hollywood's temperamental didoes. But then, the picture is comedy of the broadest sort, so exaggeration is necessary. Doesn’t Spare Horses Mr. Wanger doesn’t spare the Horses from the time that Atterbury Dodd (Mr. Howard) arrives in Hollywood and starts interviewing baby stars, to the point where Quintain, the producer, saves Colossal Studio's colossal jungle picture by giving most of the heroine’s footage to a gorilla. Mr. Dodd is a bashful, bespectacled young man with a passion for mathematics. A banker, he is sent out to stave off the tottering Colossal’s ' collapse. Mathematics and banking fail. But Lester Plum (Miss Blondell), stand-in for Thelma Cheri, the studio’s glamour .girl, takes him in hand and effects an ultimate triumph. There is a lot of good-natured fun poking at child stars, foreign directors, haughty heroines and the like. The farce grows more energetic as
time goes on. In the course of it,
Mr. Dodd gets a black eye, breaks his glasses and goes tumbling all over the lot, gets full of champagne and sleeps on the floor, learns ta tango, gets walked on by a crowd, and winds up by marrying the girl. Sinclair Overshadowed Mr. Howard, brought to Hollywood as a romantic hero, has been caught in the general slapstick craze this season. In “It’s Love I'm After,” he proved himself an expert at high comedy. In the lower, broader type of “Stand-In,” he is not so comfortable. Better performances are by Miss Blondell,. Alan Mowbray (now there's a real comedian), Marla Shelton as La Cheri, and Humphrey Bogart, as the bibulous, nonvillain-
ous Quintain. The picture good fun if you prefer slaps and falls to subtle satire and light comedy Young Mr. Sinclair, in his movie debut, is personable, British and slightly Bartholomewish. But he is completely overshadowed by young Mr. Rooney, already a seasoned actor, and the equally youthful Judy Garland. Mickey plays a tough little jockey, and plays him in a way that makes you think we'll have another Spencer Tracy on our hands in a few years. The theme is of a conceited youngster who gets his come-up-pance. Not a novel idea, but Mickey does the job ter than most adults who have! trigd the same thing. It is, without much doubt, the lad’s finest performance to date. Miss Garland emerges here as a clever little actress as well as singer. In fact, “Thoroughbreds Don’t Cry” is an entirely superior saga of the turf. There is no love interest to get in the horses’ way, and
the race shots are as good as you've ever seen. (J. T)
Granlund’s Unique Revue
Returns
to Lyric Stage
New York comes to the Lyric
this week, with a few Hollywood
In the first place, Nils T. Granlund of the Paradise Night Club in
: Manhattan, brings back his unique revue.
It is the same revue that
crowded the Lyric to S. R. O. last year, the same uproarious “Three
Sailors,” the same beautiful girls,®
one of the best lookihg vaudeville troupes that has played in Indianapolis. A few of the stooges are new; the finale calls for a man from the audience as fat as last year’s gigantic woman skater. He does the Big Apple along with a personable group of youngsters which Mr. Granlund claims includes the originator of the dance and composer of the song. { There are some new acts, too, the best of them b g Lina Basquette, the movie actress, to the Lyric stage. She proves herself as gelighirully informal as an M. C., as N. T. G. himself and her dialogue with Ed Resener, Lyric orchestra Jeader, and one of his disciples, is good comedy. 3 Her “Agus. Caliente” dance, how‘ever, is definitely of an excellence ‘far’ below what she was able to ‘produce when she was in Begtelds “Follies. ”»
Mr. Granlund’s show lacks. the
spontaneity that so characterized his ‘show last year, but it is still good. If near-nude dancing ever can be beautiful—as Continental Europeans think it is—the “Dance of the Harpies” is. The movie, “Missing Witnesses, » also concerns New York, but again with Hollywood trimmings. It tells a story of the Dewey rackets probe that is about as true to life as Mr. Granlund’s introductions of his chorus girls. John Litel and Dick. Puce ie listed as the stars —
LAST TIME TODAY—LOOK!
Stars “HIT PARADE”
Stan, } Fred e in “HIDEAWAY”
MIDNIGHT SHOW AT 11:30 P,
M. .
_ Indianapolis Sym
phony Orchestra
Fabien Sevitzky, Conductor
san
HOWARD HARRINGTON
Tenor
and the
Indianapolis Symphonic Choir
MURAT
THEATER RESERVED SEATS
RILEY 9597
o
LAFAYET TE
NEW YEAR’ S EVE PARTY
2 — EXTRA FINE
FLOOR SHOWS — 2
"LUXURIOUS FAVORS FOR EVERY ONE . GOVER CHARGE, $2.50 PER PERSON
“Iie Advance in Food or Drink Prices = cFoulianapolis. Gayest Night Soot i
are to give this season.
ankles.
costume made of tin cans.
In their second broadcast appearance together, and their first of. the season, Yehudi and Hephzibah Menuhin Detroit Symphony Orchestra at 8.p. m. tomorrow on -CBS-WFBM.' This will be the first of six concerts the gifted brother and sister
will be heard with the
’
IN NEW YORK —s8, croree ross Ship News Cameramen Say Robert Taylor. Is Regular Guy, and So Do Oxford Students.
NEW YORK, Dec. 18.—A Manhattan Miscellany: One of the hetter ways to judge the: changing of the seasons is to keep an eye on Hope Hampton. Up to about a week ago, Hope was marching down fhe aisle in a short white ermine coat, Bit now she parades down to her front pew with a mink wrap that ré
aches down to her
Constance de Pinna. the designer, attended the Fireman's Ball in a
The ship news checked -in Robert Taylor as a regular fellow and argued that he not only was a ladies’ man, but a man’s man as ‘well. Apparently, Oxford’s undergraduates thought so, too. In one of the scenes of “Yank at Oxford,” the talkie Mr. Taylor made in England, a hundred. students were hired to ,put the Hollywood Adonis through a hazing. But the boys went farther than the’ script did. At the height of the scene, they stole his pants, leaving Mr. Taylor shivering on the campus in his shorts. He didn’t act up.
# ” 2
George White was in New York awhile on furlough from Hollywood, looking into the state of affairs and wound up at 4 a. m. by sheer force of habit. When he was around the Rialto regularly, White rarely interviewed an actor or transacted a deal until well after midnight and on the film lots, authors and players wait until the curfew hours approach before they go to him. Burgess Meredith's valet, Wood, who also drives his car and walks his Great Danes, used to serve Lord Cavendish. He stili can’t get out of the habit of addressing Meredith ‘as “m’Lord.” 2 8 8 ‘New Year's Eve prices this time aren’t going to be as high in the Manhattan night clubs as they've been in previous years. Cafe men burnt their fingers at the last celebration of the [New Year when they made the tariffs too steep. Their customers celebrated at home. Jascha Heifetz, one of the world’s great violinists, took his first lesson oni the maracas, a Cuban rattle, at La Conga, the otMer night. Not important, but a fellow who visited the dressing room of Herbie Kay, husband of Dorothy Lamour, says he saw a congratulatory wire from the glamorous Lamour up on jhe wall. It was signed “Dolly ace.”
FORMS JUVENILE FILM COMPANY
HOLLYWOOD, Dec. 18 (U. P.).— Maurice Kosloff, movie dancer di-
of a new mojion picture company to be known as Maurice Kosloff, Inc. Mr. Kosloff said he will use a- cast of juvenile players in feature pictures based on successful film musicals.
"LIRR CHEZ| PAREE «x
Downstairs Apollo Theatre Bldg PRESENTS
HAL BAILEY and His Orch. ¥ 3 Floor Shows Nightly x
Finest of Fdods and Liquors Dancing 7 p. m. till closing Se
Eh podular JIS
photographers®
rector, today announced formation |.
‘Madame xX Well Filmed
Avoids Pitfalls Usual Movie Revivals.
The new production of “Madame X” at the Apollo this week avoids the pitfalls common to the refilming of old screen stories. It manages very well to stand on its own feet. : As you may remember, “Madame X” js the story of a woman whose one indiscretion so angered her husband that he literally threw her out and refused her permission to ever see her son again. Very much alone in the world and unable .to earn a living, she lives as best she can. At the end of 20 years if proves to be a pretty disreputable way. Her employer in a New Orleans dance hall discovers her ‘identity and takes her home to Paris to blackmail her husband. When she discovers the purpose of the trip, she kills the man and goes on trial for her life.
Old Film Still Good
In a rather obvious way the son, now grown, turns up to . defend Madame X, as she is known. It is his first case and he.makes a very passionate plea for the woman's life. But help has come too late for her. She is stricken before the jury has time to render a verdict. Her boy, burning with hatred for the man who has caused her downfall, is never told that she is his mother, Gladys George,- Warren William and John Beal head the cast. They perform a difficult job well. The second feature on the Apollo bill is “Manhattan Melodrama,” with Clark Gable, Myrna Loy and William Powell. You saw it three seasons ago and it hasn’t lost any of its punch. It's, as the title implies, 8 melodrama, periormed smoothly and seriously by the _op-noich trio.
Entertainment Daily F 5 o Clo sing
ART
and His Band With the
_ THREE DEBUTANTES {
No. Cover Charge
<=
Starting at the Midnight Show Tonight
| FLAPPER FOLLIES
wma SUNY A [Smiles] SLANE
The 10,000 Dollar Beauty : 2:18-TWO SHOWS A ar NIGHT, AND
Talbott
| Stratford Bes
Jwell Trained Choir Joins Orchestra in. Intense, Dramatic Psalm
Sevitzky Removes Hyposhondria From Tschaikowsky; Transcribed Concerto and Henry Hadley's ‘The Ocean,’ Heard Here First Time. By JAMES THRASHER : a In this remarkable musical season of ours, the Indianapolis Sym-
phonic Choir appears on the scene, giving evidence that it is ready to take its place beside its sister organization, the symphony orchestra.
Sym phonic.
~
Yesterday's program, which is to” be repeated tonight, again was replete with “firsts.” The choir, on its first performance, sang Kodaly’s “Psalmus Hungaricus” for the first time in Indianapolis. Mr. Sevitzky, incidentally, gave the work its American premiere in Boston two seasons ago. And the tenor soloist
| of that occasion, Howard Harring-
ton, is with the orcnestra this week for the local hearing, :
Also new to this city are the
‘| Cencerto-Grosso in D Minor of late |
Corelli-Geminiani, and the Henry Hadley’s tone poem, “The Ocean.” To offset all the newness, the program closes with Tschaikowsky’s Symphony No. 4. The “Psalmus” is'a work of. deep spiritual’/beauty, intense drama and rich color. The text is a 16th Century Hungarian paraphrase of the 55th Psalm. Kodaly, the contempo-
‘| rary Hungarian composer, has suc
ceeded, where so many fail, in
‘clothing the impressive scriptural
measures in fitting beauty. There is none of the Gregorian austerity nor any workaday Protestant harmony in Kodalys music. It is steeped in an Old Testament atmosphere. The poignancy of King David’s supplication, the fierceness of his wrath, are of an Oriental opulence of expression. Yet there is not a cheap or obvious measure in the composition. The “Psalmus Hungaricus” is a sternly difficult work. But thanks to its masterly early training by Elmer Steffen, and - Mr. Sevitzky's complete grasp of the score’s every element, the chorus rose to the occasion where many might have failed. The tenor section, that weak link in so many choral chains, was excellent. And the sopranos soared to clear, strong As and Bs in a manner to indicate that the Beethoven Ninth Symphony, later in the year, will be in capable hands and throats. As soloist, Mr. Harrington was not in particularly good voice. The vocal color, though pleasing, did not meet all the music's demands, so
postulations than in the stern imprecations of the text. The symphony served to show again Mr. Sevitzky’s particular genius for illuminating or, more aptly, flattering, = Tschaikowsky’s music.
This was observed at the lime of
(
Yh A
One Nite Only - TONIGHT
BARNEY RAPP and His NEW ENGLANDERS Featuring Ruby Wright Adm, All Evening
60c TX TOMORROW Henry Bia-Gini ADMISSION 40¢
ROOF
Ht,
that he was more at home in David's
his guest appearance here last year, when he conducted the Tschaikowsky Fifth. Yesterday’s reading maintained a remarkable balance between sentiment and ‘vigor. tawdry passages assumed manly stature. This s ymphony is a pecularly subjective work, and a ‘morbid one. But Mr. Sevitzky took the composer in hand yesterday, removed all traces of hypochondria, and gave his music an absorbing interpretation. Our new conductor, in fact, becomes more - impressive with each appearance. His high. standard was maintainedy in the program's other items, though the orchestra itself ran into some individual difficulties during the afternoon. The Hadley tone poem fulfills the demands of this type of music. It is direct understandable and true to its subject without being .overly literal. The Concerto Grosso is the familiar “La - Folia” of violinistic fame, arranged for strings, cembalo and organ by Corelli's contemporary, Geminiani Fahy
Shirley Is No. 1 At Box Offices
Times Special HOLLYWOOD,=Cal., Dec. 18.—For the second consecutive year, Shirley Temple ranked as No. 1 at the nation’s film box offices, the Motion Picture Herald announced today. Bing Crosby moved into fourth position from 22d. The 10 leaders in the order named are: Miss Temple, Clark Gable, Robert Tayler, Mr. Crosby, William Powell, Jane Withers, Fred Astaire and Ginger
Even the more |
WHAT, WHEN, NWHERE
APOLLO . os pane 2 at dy fe
and 9: My aafiattan Me! = ile. Ie Powell, ase ey
CIRCLE
“victoria the, Great,” with Anna } Neagle, An albrook and H. B. Warner, at 1, 1041, 4: a, | 17:03 and
ENGLISH'S *
“Brother Rat,” Geor bbott's Joducion. ut a COMEOy ge 5 Ds : klehotfe.
Curtin’at 350, oo : INDIANA
“True : Confession,’
Lombard “with . Garols
rd Ma cMurra, aq Ys
an Shanghai, 5 with ay Won and Phil Ahn,-a a 3:45, 6:35 a nd 9:20, © s
KEITH'S : vith Hedy Kiesler, at 1, 3:25. 5:50, 8:15 and 12:40. Dick Mer-
“Atlantic. Flight,” with Di HB Jack ‘Lambie snd Paula Stone.
Nor
“Ecstacy,”
0 schedule’ available, LOEW'S
“Stand In,’ with L Hi and Josn al ondell, aol :40, 3550,
8 aa hbreds Don't Cry,” with Judy Garland and Mickey Roo . Tay. 1s, 2:20,’ 5 25 ancl‘8 wn ney
LYRIC tay=sihg Witnesses,’ - with John Lists and ick Purcell; at 11:50, 2:30,
d 10: RR Girls of 1038,” with Nils Tian] und, at 1: 105, 3: 45, 6:43 and OHIO
“Hit Parade,’ with Frances Langford and Phil Regan. Also '‘HidIY Lory with Prea Stone and ‘Mar-
AMBASSADOR
Ya Specimen, "” with Errol nn and Joan B Blondeil. ' Also “Life of Y Emile Zola,” with Paul Muni. *
ALAMO “Trails. Devide,” with Tom Keane.
Also ‘Bad Guy,” with Bruce Cabot.
'DOGEIE PAPOOSE
ab
poose pack where the old maestros flea terrier, “The Killer,” rides when
Bernie goes to. and from the set »f
“Love and Hisses.”
— ENGLISH—
POPULAR PRICE MATINEE 2:50 , TONIGHT 8:30
MONKS, JR. and.
DF. RO
EVES: Ore. $2.20, Bale, $1.65,--$1.10,
Rogers, Sonja Henie, Gary Cooper and Myrna Loy.
A SENSATION!
Dancers.
ON SCREEN:
“MISSING WITNESSES”
Gal, 85¢. Sat. Mat: Ore. $1.65, Baio. $1.10; Gal, Sc; Inc. Tax. i
ALL INDIANAPOLIS GOING WILD OVER INSANE N. T. G. STAGE SHOW NOW PLAYING LYRIC THEATER
“GLAMOUR GIRLS" A BIG HIT
LYRIC TURNED INTO MAD HOUSE AS THREE SAILORS DASH UP AND DOWN AISLES ON CLOWNING SPREE
Extra Shows ‘Today And Sunday. To Handle Crowds
JANIS ANDRE'S SEMI-NUDE DANCE: LINA BASQUETTE, MOVIE STAR, APPEARS IN PERSON!
Sure-Fire Combination of Dynamite. Laughs and Glorious Girls! _ Extra Fun as Audience: Goes Upon Stage fo Join “Big Apple”
Ben Bernie has rigged up a pa- |
1|Retired Theater
‘Owner Is Dead *
COLUMBUS, oO. Dec. 18 (U.P) .=
‘Lee Milton Boda, 78, retired Colum
bus theater owner, died late last night at his home. The funeral will be held Monday. ‘Boda was born in Springfield and later resided in Dayton. He had been a newspaperman, press agent, thee ater manager, and owner. He. bee came associated with the Valentine Co., which operated theaters in Columbus, Springfield, Dayton and Indianapolis. In 1920, Boda acted as mediator in the Actors’ Equity strike which tied up productions throughout the country. Te
ho Connected With ‘English Theater
Mr. Boda came to Indianapolis in 1897 as a representative of the Valentine .Co., which operated the English Theater. He later became president of the company and held that position until his retirement in 1930. : A ‘son, Robert S. Boda who mane ages the Hartmann Theater in Coe lumbus, survives.
BREAKFAST COFFEE
Allan Jones now ‘dishes out coffee at 10 a. m. daily to the “Everybody Sing” company in his new trailer, which serves as his dressing room on the sound stage. Saturday Cork’s
mE SKY J. ‘HARBOR
Minors VEARR HOW.
AR an EARLY CHRISTMAS NIGHT—80c COUPLE One ‘Block South Municipal Airport
Daughter of Shanghai
With Anna May Wong
At Your Neighborhood Theater
NORTH SIDE 16th = Delaware Cinema Dei sous, ' “Bulldog Drummond Comes Back” “FLIGHT FROM GLORY” Sun. Double Feature—Irene Dunne “HIGH, WIDE AND HANDSOME”
“THEY WON'T FORGET” Continuous from 1:30
U p town 42nd & College
Double Feature Errol Flynn “THE PERFECT SPECIMEN” “COUNSEL FOR CRIME” Sun. Double Feature—Zasu Pitts “FORTY NAUGHTY GIRLS” Shirley Temple “HEIDI”
. ‘e St. Cl. & Ft. Wayne St. Clair” mpi tam “THEY WON'T FORGET” “THAT CERTAIN WOMAN” Sun. Double Feature—Ronald! Colman “PRISONER OF ZENDA” “DANGER—LOVE AT WORK”
Talbott & 22nd Double Feature Edna Mae Oliver
“MY DEAR MISS ALDRICH” Bruce Cabot “BAD GUY” Sun. Double Feature—Joan Crawford “BRIDE WORE RED” Dick Powell “VARSITY SHOW”
REX 30th at Northwestern
Double Feature Miriam Hopkins “WOMAN CHASES MAN” Buck Jones “SANDFLOWY
Sun. Double Feature—Deanna Durbin “100 MEN AND A GIRL” Bruce Cabot “BAD GUY”
G 1 k Nh Ag Tinh arric Claudette Colbert “IT HAPPENED ONE NIGHT” “RED LIGHTS AHEAD” Sun. Double Featurei-Deanna Durbin “100 MEN AND A’ GIRL” “GOOD OLD SOAK”
MECCA Siri Wallace ry “GOOD OLD SOAK” “THIRTEENTH CHAIR” Sun. Double Feature—Spanky McFarland “Gi AL SPANKY” “100 AND A A oll 9h & Soa Double Ere ; “FOOTLOOSE HEIRESS” “100 MEN AND A GIRL” Sun. Double Feature—Spencer Tracy *THEY GAVE HIM A SUN"
NORTH SIDE Illinois and 34th R | TZ ' Double Feature : Paul Muni “LIFE OF EMILE ZOLA” “ANNAPOLIS SALUTE” Sun. Double Feature—Warner Baxter
“WIFE, DOCTOR AND NURSE” “CHAN ON BROADWAY”
Hollywood beeiiee. “A FIGHT TO A FINISH” ~ Smencer Tracy “BIG CITY” Sun. Double Feature—Ronald Colman
“PRISONER OF ZENDA” “IDOL OF THE CROWDS”
Z a r n g Nino Martini
“MUSIC FOR MADAME” Sylvia Sidney “DEAD END” : Sun. Double Feature—Barara Stanwyek “BREAKFAST FOR TWO” Marian Marsh “Saturday's Hero”
EAST SIDE. Yq : hr FA merson og Fue: : “LIFE BEGINS WITH LO' = Joan Crawford “Bride Wore Hea Staris Tomorrow—Herbert Marshall - “BREAKFAST FOR TWO” Marian Marsh “Saturday’s Heroes”
Hamilton msi
Donbls Feature Jane Withers “WILD AND WOO LLY” Dolores Del Rio “LANCER SPY” Sun. Double Feature—Ronald Cotman “LOST HORIZON” “LONDON BY NIGHT” 1332 E. Wash! st. Neigh-
Stra nd im Gia Today. and —— a Warner Baxter Loretta Young . “WIFE, DOCTOR AND NURSE” Shirley Temple—Jean Hersholt “HEIDI”
fi 12 30 Mattie, Sates Until 2 EXTRA! LATE SHOWS Every Ssturday—Sunds A a
Cen'ral at’ Fall Crk:
yh
RIVOLI
- Last Times Tonight Z
EAST SIDE.
3155 E. Toth st. » Doors Open at 5:45 $ Paul Muni. “LIFE OF EMILE ZOLA” * “SOMETHING TO SING ABOUT” EXTRA! Last Show: Tonight - Only! " Clark :Gable—Constance . Bennett “AFTER OFFICE HOURS” Sun... Double, Feature—Loretta - Young “WIFE, DOCTOR AND NURSE”
“Charlie Chan on Broadway”
Tacoma .-
: Sonight 3 Toners. u Featur Ronald Special Do Pade ire ‘Carroll
“PRISONER OF ZENDA” Bruce Cabot—Virginia Grey “BAD GUY”
4020 E. New York Double Feature
Tuxedo fr | briny Hopkins . “WOMAN CHA S MAN” . Dick Powell’ \WARSITY SHOW” Sun. Double Feature—Nan Grey’ “LOVE. INA’ BUNGALOW” | Sylvia Sidney “DEAD END
IRVING 5507 E. Wash. St.
Double Feature * Ronald Colman ¥ “LOST, HORIZON”. : : Jones Family “HOT WATER” ‘Sun. Double Feature—Baddy | ‘Rogers : “THIS WAY, PLEASE” “THAT. CERTAIN WOMAN”
: WEST SIDE & Bl Howard Featur
Howa rd Zane Gre “A oi Funtony me Sun. Double ‘Feature-Joe E: Brown
RIDING ON AIR” ~~ Dolores Del Rio “LANCER SPY”
|ST ATE | 2702 ww. 1040 St.
‘Double: Feature .. . Jack: Randall “RIDERS OF. THE DAWN” Dick Powell “VARSITY SHOW” ‘Sun. Deohble Feature~Warner’ Baxter “WIFE, DOCTOR AND NURSE”
sine
Pa ranfount see S|
“ONE-MAN JUSTICE" ‘Donald Woods “TALENT Sun. ‘Double Featutg—Auin Sheridan
“MY DEAR MISS ALDRICH” Be Imont Sh fu " e Ge Murphy “THE MEN MARRY"
WEST SIDE "Speedway. City Double Feature
C Speedway wee “NORTH OF THE RIO GRANDE" “LOVE TAKES FLIGHT” Sun. Double Feature—Errol Flynn “THE PERFECT SPECIMEN” “ON SUCH A NIGHT”:
SOUTH SIDE av New Garfield 208 Shelby Double Feature
Bette Davis
CE
dw. G. Bobinson “SIR G
Jack Oakie—Ann Sothern “SUPER SLEUTH”
Fountain Square “Double Feature - Claude Rains “THEY WON'T FORGET” “A FIGHT TO A FINISH” fun. Double Feature—Herbert ‘Marshall “BREAKFAST FOR TWO” ~- Shirley Temple “HEIDI”
S A nders At. Fountain Square.
Tonight ' Special Double one Rits Bros. . Tony Martin “LIFE BEGINS IN COLLEGE” ; Jean Muir and All-Star Cast
“WHITE BONDAGE”
G De Fasten rove Double Feature “COWBOY STAR” Dolores Del Rio “LANCER SPY” ‘Sun. Double Feature—Joan Crawford “BRIDE WORE RED” £ “100 MEN A GIRL” .
Avalon Buck Jones “BLACK ACES” - Harlow-Gable “SARATOGA” ' Sun. Double Feature—Nan Grey
“LOVE IN A BUNGALOW” Patsy Kelly “PICK A STAR”
Oriental "Double Feature
Pros. & Chure Double Feature
“Sun. Double Feature—Rits Bros.
“LIFE BEGINS IN COLLEGE" ! Saar CERTAIN WOMAN"
