Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 January 1938 — Page 4

PAGE 4.

Elviry and Brothers in Lyric Film

Ozark Trio Featured in "Swing Your Lady" Due Friday.

By JAMES THRASHER If I had my druthers, to borrow

a phrase, there's nothing I'd druther

do than tell you that the Weaver Brothers and Elviry are coming back to the Lyric. They're not coming back to the stage, which has languished these three years without their rustic presence. But they will be on the screen in “Swing Your Lady,” that farcical fantasy on hill-billy life which had something of a run on Broadway last season. Having, once upon a time, paid admission three times in one week (when I could ill afford it) to see

the Weavers, I make no claim to an |

Chief Protest On Grouping of ‘Shots

impartial feeling. To me, Elviry and Frank (Abner) and Leon (Brother Cicero) are the Ozarks’ prime contribution to our entertainment life. That isn't forgetting Robin Burns, Dick Powell and Dizzy Dean, either.

Adapted From Stage

“Swing Your Lady,” in its stage form, was the work of Kenyon Nicholson, the prolific Crawfordsville collaborator, and Charles Robinson. It was taken over to the screen by Joseph Schrank and Maurice Leo, where it is telling an out-sized story of romance, jealousy and misunderstanding. Principals in this tender whimsy are Louise Fazenda, Nat Pendleton, who topped the Olympic heavyweight wrestlers a few years back, and Dan’l Boone Savage, the bearded one from the banks of Scopes Creek, Ky. Dan'l used to be seen at the local Armory in his precinema days when he claimed the world’s professional scufflin’ championship. Miss Fazenda is seen as a female Goliath who shoes horses for a liying and does a little wrestling as an avocation. Before she knows she is to wrestle Mr. Pendleton, stranded on tour, they are smitten by the fatal passion. Then the bewhiskered Kentucky giant steps in as the jilted lover. And the fur begins to fly.

Monte Blue on Stage

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

|

FILM "INSIDE

NAZI GERMANY' COMING TO INDIANA FRIDAY

This scene from the new

collection of food and money. ”n » 8

By JOSEPH NEW YORK, Jan. 26.—Persons agreed today that the

theaters, is remarkable not because simply because of its juxtaposition s the Nazi dictatorship. ® Counterparts of many of the] | March of Time sequences have ap- | peared in the newsreels, particular- | ly the scenes showing Adolf Hitler | lin action and those annual military display at Nurem- | berg. However, threaded in the film are sequences showing the persecution of Jews which were smuggled out of Germany by Julien Bryant, the cameraman, according to March of Time officials. In this sequence are scenes showing German children | looking at posters in which Jews are

benches painted yellow and marked | “For Jews,” and several photographs of signs at city limits which state “Juden Unerwunscht,” or] “Jews Not Wanted.” There is also one harrowing se- |

to the Indiana Friday, shows a Nazi Storm Trooper m

March of Time film, “Inside has been banned in several cities and by

howing

controversial “March of Time” film, coming

aking a regular

ls Bosed

MITCHELL

Times Special Writer

familiar with the newsreel industry Nazi Germanys’ which the Warner Brother's chain of sensational single scenes but of many phases of life under

of any

quence purporting to show the tor-

ture of a radical by Storm Troopers, |

but a Mare

A German couple shown listening to a government broadcast telling them that Mayor La Guardia controls New York's vice and racketeers, and that 65,000 persons are starving in Cleveland.

lowed by pictures showing the secution of Jews. photographs of nuns in jail and o

the swastika.

| vod stands above Hitler.” After this are pictures made in | German munitions plants, and the announcer remarks that these | the people.” the announcer says that “one pound of lard-butter is the average quota for the average home.”

Propaganda Is Described There are effective scenes showing

|

uine, was not made in Germany. the scene a struggling man strapped face downward guillotine. The film opens with scenes of Berlin terrace cafes. Well-dressed men and women sit at tables eating and drinking. A chef is shown preparing a meat dish. The scene shifts to a Berlin park. On the

play games or sit in the sun. Then the announcer states that this is the side of Nazi Germany familiar to tourists, but he says that there is a more sinister side which no tourist ever sees. Here

Mixed in with all this are the] Weavers, of course. Others are | Humphrey Bogart, as a wrestling | promoter; Allan Jenkins and Frank | McHugh, as his lieutenants, and | Penny Singleton, as the girl in Mr. | Bogart's life. ; Just to be sure that you don’t run | out of home town favorites, the | Lyric has arranged to have Monte Blue as the stage headliner on the same bill. Mr. Blue also is a native Hoosier. His father was killed in a railroad wreck, and Monte grew up | in the Soldiers and Sailors Orphan- | age at Knightstown. Mr. Blue has been, successively, a | printer's devil, train fireman, steel | worker, tramp, coal miner, cowboy, circus rider and lumberjack, besides a movie actor. He was chased out of Portland and Seattle for making “inflammatory” speeches and got work as a sailor. Jumping ship at San Francisco, he went to Los Angeles where he finally got a job digging post holes on the Griffith Studio lot.

Won a Promotion

This time his speech making got him a promotion instead of a dis missal. Mr. Griffith heard him holding forth to the workers on the boss’ low wage-scale. The boss liked his style, if not his subject. So he put him before the cameras as a cowboy, a double, a villain and finally, a leading man. Mr. Blue hasn't appeared in many pictures recently. But you may have seen him at the Apollo this week in “The Lives of a Bengal Lancer.” Another star on the Lyric stage bill will be Mary Dees, Jean Harlow's standin who completed the late star's role in “Saratoga.” In fact, even if the Weavers weren't coming back, it would be quite a promising week the Lyric Management has prepared for us.

Suit Reveals Pay Of StarOnly $150

IN NEW YORK —sy GEORGE ROSS

Manhattan Hobo Elite

Form New Five & Ten

Club; Judge Prince Trades Gavel for Baton.

NEW YORK, Jan. 26.—A Manhattan Miscellany: a hobo fraternity to end all hobo fraternities.

Now aborning is They call this one the

Five & Ten Club and its charter nucleus is headed by Jack Dempsey and Jim Tully, both eminent knights of the rods. The eligibility rules are

easy. 5000 miles around the country

The aspirant to membership must prove that he has journeyed by freight or to have gained the hospitality

of at least one hobo “jungle.” The roster, of course, will include only distinguished people—writers, boxers, lawyers, bankers and stage and screen actors. Wallace Ford is one of the first to be initiated. The Five & Ten Club meets for its inaugural in Dempsey's place and the banquet will avoid chi-chi as much as possible. Piece de resistance: Mulligan Stew. Every course will be served in tin cans and scooped up With rudimentary utensils. Every time Justice Leopold Prince steps from a high seat on the bench and swaps Justice's scales for a baton at a symphony concert, it calls for a recount of his musical career. He has been at it for 25 years or more; dispensing justice by day and songs by night. And cmong authoritative musicians he is considered quite a figure in the musical world. Not only has he conducted many an orchestra, but he composes, also, one of his bestknown numbers being “Duldie,” which is played frequently over the air waves.

Started at Home

He started, Judge Prince confides, by playing violin duets with his son at home. Soon the neighbors started drifting in for fireside concerts. Then word spread that the judge was equally at home with a law hook and & symphonic score and invitations poured in

from many people. The judge began to get out on public podiums

HOLLYWOOD, Jan. 26 (U. P.).— A movie star surprised Hollywood today by revealing that he earns only $150 a week. He is Jon Hall, the husky, handsome star of the hit picture, ‘ Hurricane.” Hall told his salary while testifying in a court battle to rid himself of a contract with an agent, Art Meyer, which would pay Meyer 10 per cent of his earnings. Hall said he was a minor, only 20, when he signed the contract two years ago. After a day's argument, Hall settled the dispute by paying Meyer $700, and the contract was torn up.

"HOT SHOTS" HEAD TALENT NIGHT

“Talent Night” at the Fountain Square this evening will headline the “Collegiate Hot Shots,” a vocal and instrumental trio from Indiana Central College made up of Tom Fouts, Gerald Richards and Bob Gillen. Other acts will include “Buzz” Barton's Top Hatters; Josephine La Rosa, singer; Joan Waldner and Bob Pruett, cornet duet; Arthur Boner, musical glasses; Mary Alleen Hart, acrobatic dancer; Helen Maloney, accordion, and Charles Waldo, tap dancer. Auditions for “Talent Night" are held each Saturday from 1 to 4 p. m. at the Fountain Sqware.

MORE THAN BARGAIN

Humphrey Bogart got more than he bargained for when he bought Hugh Herbert's Hollywood home. It seems that Hugh was on the hobo list as an easy mark and Humphrey has inherited scores of gentlemen 6f leisure who want a dollar or a

OR “LIFE OF

PAUL MUNI or |

shyly, but so great was his success that eventually a group got together to endow a permanent musisal organization under his direcvic. At rehearsals, he is as earnest, they say, as Toscanini and brooks no nonsense from the playars. Incidentally, the Justice-conductor reports that in 25 years on the bench he never has had a case involving a musician. He explains this by surmising that musicians have neither the temperament nor funds for litigation.

Police Major Is Pianist

The judge is not the only public servant to pursue a musical career in off-hours. There is Maj. John A. Warner, Superintendent of State Police in New York, who is known as one of the finest pianists in the country. Once & pupil of such masters as Widor, Harold Bauer, Vladimir de Pachman and Leopold Godowski, he became sufficiently skilled to satisfy all his teachers. . Occasionally Maj. Warner can ke lured into a piano or organ recital with celebrated orchestras. He sits down and plays a lengthy concerto

tice. It's a trick his teacher Godowski taught him. (As a postscript: Maj. Warner is hailed as the greatest state police head of all time.) Years, the ex-Ziegfeld Follies showgirl who married A. C. Blumenthal and subsequently became a denizen of the night clubs, has settled down. She has become a guiding spirit of an experimental theater which proposes to discover

“COLLEGIATE HOT sSHors” ‘Waldnere Pruett-Art Bower Waldner-Helena Maloney

after a long interval, without prac-4

and nurse along new talent. The takes her executive duties seriously, is at her desk at 10 a. m,, sends out for her luncheon, is the last on2 out, and for a month she has been a by her absence from

Disney's Story Read to Quints

Times Special CALLANDER, Ont, Jan. 26— The Dionne Quintuplets, under the tutelage of Frank Donovan, are taking a course in photoplay appreciation. “Professor Donovan” is spending his idle hours here reading a French version of “Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs” to the five little actresses. RKO Pathe News is photographing its newest epic of the infants, tentatively titled “Quintupland.” Mr. Donovan as director of the picture is ingratiating himself with the children by reading the Grimm Brothers’ story so they may appreciate the Disney feature when eventuallx it is booked in a Callander theater. Meanwhile, Dr. Dafoe has given his permission for the children to see movies for the first time,

Guild Opposes Fingerprinting

HOLLYWOOD, Jan. 26 (U. P).— A plan to finger-print all motion picture workers, criefly for a check on the large number of extras, drew

opposition today from the Screen Actors’ Guild. The board of directors of the Guild, which includes in its membership most movie players from low-priced extras to top-salaried stars, passed a resolution stating that it is “opposed to finger-print-ing members of the motion picture industry.” Finger-printing was suggested after the District Attorney's office

| investigated reports of racketeering

among movie extras, The American Civil Liberties Union has interested itself in the matter, protesting that finger-prints would “regiment” the industry and be “a step toward fascism.”

POLISH DANCER SEEKS STARDOM

HOLLYWOOD, Jan. 26 (U. P).— Toni Noviska, 19-year-old blond premiere ballerina of the Polish Grand Opera, today became Hollywood’s latest importation from abroad. Producer David O. Selznick announced he signed her to a contract and will give her a thorough coaching in English for an American movie career.

i ht

LB Today & Tomorrow, Only!

LON BLONDELL “PERFECT SPECIMEN” «ALI BABA GOES \ I] 99 Eddie |

Canto

depicting the | mitted that this scene, while gen- | calls “Goebbels’ p opaganda maIn| chine.” 151 shown on a Berlin newsstand and into 8] he announcer states, “The newspa- |

pers print only what the Govern-|

A sheaf of newspapers are

ment wants the people to read.” The announcer remarks that the propaganda machine enabled the

| shocking to the world’s democra-

ridiculed, and pictures of park | grass of the park smiling Germans cles.” The use of the radio Is Hllus-

| |

| deutscher

h of Time official ad- |. working of what the announcer '

® | appears the torture scene. It is fol-) gend and receiving “their first uni-' per- | forms and their first rank in Then there are war machine.”

They are preparing, |

hen the German army will march |

Here the announcer | into the rich wheat fields of the states, “To the good Nazi, not even Ukraine.” There are many pictures

of labor camps, | Fritz Kuhn in Film

The latter portion of the film |

| Plants “are I shows international aspects of Nazi buying scanty supplies of food and | propaga -half | shots in t

nda. The most remarkable | his sequence illustrate the activities in the United States of | Fritz Kuhn, the fuehrer of the Ger-man-American Bund, or Amerika- | Volksbund. Kuhn is shown in his office, and also is, shown addressing a rally of his followers. The announcer calls him | “a former German machine gunner”

and states that in summer camps

in the United States he seeks tO “imitate Hitler's mighty military

| machine.”

| Nazis to establish “regimentation |

|trated. A man and his wife, after |

| supper, are shown listening to a | broadcast during which they learn that “65,000 people are starving and freezing in Cleveland.”

Boys

NEW YORK, Jan. husband, Bob Gregory, of Europe, arrived on the 1

wrestler they were greeted by the mother of the bride, the Ranee of Sarawak, who came here some weeks ago to sell her paintings for the benefit of a leper colony in the monarchy she rules with her husband, the Rajah, in Northern Borneo. Gregory was under the impression that the Ranee was not enthusiastic about his marriage to her daughter and he looked apprehensive when she hustled in with Paul Damski, a wrestling promoter. Within a few minutes she had distributed her blessings.

Gives Her Blessing

right in my eyes,” she said. “The story that I opposed their marriage is all bilge. I must say, however, that I don't like his wrestling, 1 have seen him in the ring and he looks out of place with those gorillas. Those terrible wrestlers! They have hair from their necks to their heels. I want him to be-~ come an actor.” The Ranee scoffed when her daughter said they planned to go to Hollywood for a rest. “Nonsense,” she said. “You can’t rest in Hollywood. You can't rest in New York either.” «But Mother,” said the Princess, “we go to bed every night at 8. We don’t go out at night at all.”

What About Big Apple?

“Well, you won't be in bed by 8 here,” said the Ranee. “Tell me, Baba, are they dancing the Big Apple in London?” The Ranee, who took command of the situation, said she had two other daughters—the Princess Pearl who married a band leader in a swing music ceremony and the Princess Gold who is now Lady Inchcape. The Rajah, whose English name is Sir Charles Vyner Brooke, is absolute monarch of a nation of 50.000 square miles. His grandfather was made Rajah when he helped the natives out of a crisis. The present Rajah is reported to have disapproved of the marriages of the Princesses Pearl and Baba.

JOE E. BROWN'S SON ELOPES TO RENO

HOLLYWOOD, Jan. 26 (U. P.).—Mitchell (Mike) Frankovitch, former college athlete and adopted son of Joe E. Brown, the comedian, and Miss Georgiana Geagans revealed today that they had eloped to Yuma, Ariz, Sunday.

WITH ONE HAND?

Priscilla Lane is spending hour after hour learning to roll homemade cigarets for her role in “Dude Rancher.” Her teacher is Bud Osborne, a bona fide cowboy.

NEXT_ERIDAY

"ONE NIGHT ONLY and Hh Orchestra JUNE RICHMOND "Sepia Dixie Song Bird"

pall] On Yeriany

Indiana Theater News Shop —~ TONIGHT — WALTZ NIGHT JONNNY BURKARTH and his N. B, C. Orchestra 28¢c Before 9

Aural

| establish a

are shown entering the Ju-!

| Princess Baba and Win Mother's Blessing

96 (U. P.)—Princess Baba of Sarawak and her middleweight wrestler and self-styled champion iner Manhattan today en route to Hollywood where they hope to get screen tests. Somewhat to the surprise of the

«Whatever my children do is |

| mans,” but that they cannot coun-

Kuhn's followers are shown drilling in Manhattan. They wear uni- | forms similar to those worn by German Storm Troopers. A sequence shows a town meeting in Southbury, Conh., where Kuhn once planned to colony. Citizens of | Southbury state that they have only | respect for “the old order of Ger- |

tenance “German secret agents’

TR NY

German children look a the military machine.

Press, radio and all forms of publicity

4

mB

t posters attacking the Jews and glorifying

are Nazi-

controlled, according to this film, recently banned in several theaters.

masquerading as American citizens.’

Palace during the German Exposi-

LOR f| the announcer states, for the time | tion is shown. J Christian churches decorated with “‘w

Kuhn Angered by Film

The inclusion in the film of scenes made in the United States angered Kuhn. He was given a preview of the film in the offices of the March of Time. He and 20 followers had been invited to see the film

at a private showing, and March of Time officials, fearing trouble, had asked for police protection while they were in the building. Two plainclothesmen from the Police Department were assigned. The writer was present at the showing. Instead of Kuhn followers, only Kuhn and one other man with two women friends arrived. They sat through the film quietly. One of the women laughed nervously when Kuhn was shown making a speech, but Kuhn said nothing. After the film had been run off, Louis de Rochemont, a March of Time official, asked Kuhn what he thought of it. Kuhn shrugged his shoulders. He and his companions started out of the door, but de Rochemont invited them into his private office. Kuhn and his friends entered de Rochemont’s office, but the women waited outside.

It was after 11 p. m. and Kuhn

the | Picketing of the Grand Central appeared to be sleepy.

“Did you find any errors in fact in the picture?” de Rochemont | asked. “It is not true,” said Kuhn, “Why do you link up the Bund with the | pictures of Germany? There is no connection.” The principal purpose of the film, de Rochemont said, was to show the functioning of the “Nazi propa- | ganda machine” and that the inter- | national aspects of the machine | were quite as important as the na- { tional. | Kuhn disagreed from his original | point and said that soon he would | be able to prove that “two and a | half million dollars of Communist | gold from Russia was recently un- | loaded at a pier in Manhattan.” He also said that the Communists | have a plan by which they can | bomb every bridge in Greater New | York in three minutes Later, he said, that the scenes of nuns in jail and those showing the persecution | of Jews “gave the wrong impression land should be cut out.” He said | that t | press and of speech | than there is in the United States. {Then he shook hands with de Rochemont and left.

‘Bob

Child Seeks Film Chance

Travels 500 Miles to Meet| Producer De Mille.

KANSAS CITY, Mo., Jan. 26 (U. P.) —Cecil B. De Mille, veteran fil; | producer, said today he was “deeply | moved” by an invitation to run for | United States Senator from California, but he had decided against it. His trip across the country has convinced him, De Mille said, that through motion pictures and radio programs he had “petter vehicles to reach the public” than he would as senator. Mr. De Mille, who came here from Chicago, to attend the marriage of his daughter, Cecilia, to Joseph WwW. Harper, Los Angeles real estate man. The procucer was besieged by | movie-struck job seekers before his party could get out of the Union Station. One of them was Minnie Jean Lamb, 13, who came 500 miles from her home in Texarkana, Tex, to be here when Mr. De Mille arrived. “You're a little young for my pic tures,” Mr. De Mille told her. “But look at Shirley Temple,” said Minnie Jean. “yes, but she’s not working for me,” Mr. De Mille said, smiling. He advised her to finish school and when she is 18 years old to see him again. “Well, at least, Mr. De Mille, I can tell everyone at home that I met you,” the girl said as Mr. De Mille moved away.

Sevitzky Directs Concert Tonight

Fabien Sevitzky, Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra conductor, will direct the season’s second concert of the Philadelphia Chamber String Simfonietta in that city this evening. Mr. Sevitzky is the group's founder and conductor, and members are musicians from the Philadelphia Orchestra. Following the concert, Mr. and Mrs. Sevitzky will be joined in New York by Franklin Miner, orchestra manager. Mr. Sevitzky and Mr. Miner are to begin negotiations for soloists for the Indianapolis Symphony’s 1938-39 season.

A 4119

H ore

WHAT, WHEN, WHERE

APOLLO

“The Lives of a Bengal Lancer,” with Gary Cooper, Franchot Tone and Sir Guy Standing, at 11, 2:14,

“Dr. Syn,” with George Arliss and John Loder, at 12:48, 4:02, 7:16 and

10:30. CIRCLE

“She's Got Everything,” with Gene Raymond and Ann Sothern, at 11, 1:48, 4:36, 7:24 and 10:12, “Charlie Chan at Monte Carlo,’ with Warner Oland, Keyve Luke and Sidney Blackmer, at 12:36, 3:24, 6:12

and 9 CIVIC

“Excursion,” a comedy by Victor Wolfson. Curtain at 8:30.

INDIANA

“The Jury's Secret,” with Ken Taylor and Fay Wray, at 11:20, 2:31 5:42 and 8:53. ‘Hollywood Hotel,” with Benny Goodman, Dick Powell and RoseMaly Lane, at 12:26, 3:37, 6:48 and

LOEW'S

«The Hurricane,” with Jon Hall Dorothy Lamour, Mary Astor, at 12:30, 3:40, 6:50 and 10 “Paid to Dance,” Wit Jacqueline Wells, at 11:20, 2:30, and 8:50. Braddock-Farr Fight Pictures, 11, 2:11, 5:20 and 8:30.

LYRIC

“Ted Weems and on stage at 1:10,

138. “The Invisible Menace,” with Karloff, at 11:51, 2:36, 5:31,

and 10:25. KEITH'S

“Ali Baba Goes to Town,” with Eddie Cantor. Also “The Perfect.

Specimen.” OHIO «Life of Emile Zola,” with Paul Muni. Also “No More Women.” AMBASSADOR

“Submarine D-1,” O'Brien. Also “45 Fat Jane Withers.

ALAMO

“Talk of the Devil,” with Eilers.

t

h Don Terry. 5:40

at

His Orchestra,” 3:55, 6:50 and

Boris 8:16

Pat

ith hers,” with

Sally Also “The Wrong Road.”

57 £ TALL } CHARLIE CHAN

(LPFN NTS OL AND STARTS FRIDAY! JOAN BENNETT HENRY FONDA in “1 MET MY LOVE AGAIN"

Plus Grand Action Hit! GARY COOPER in “THE LIVES OF A

BENGAL LANCER” Bole. Seats 30c After 6

GLARE ILL NY [LTE LOUELLA PARSONS EEL SERED ROSEMARY LANE DICK POWELL HUGH HERBERT EET ELLY

Dorsey Here

Friday Night

immy to Present Floor Show At Indiana Roof.

J

In addition to four hours of his | popular dance music, Jimmy Dorsey | will offer a floor show for Indiana Roof patrons during his appearance Friday night. Headlining his show are June Richmond, billed as the ‘Sepia Swingstress”’; Bob Eberle and Don Matteson, singers, and Ray McKinley, novelty drummer. Jimmy is one-half of the famous Dorsey brothers who organized their dance orchestra after playing with | nationally famous bands. The other brother, a trombone virtuoso, now has his own outfit. Jimmy, who specializes on saxophone and clarinet, until recently led his band on the Bing Crosby radio hour. He left the air for the coast-to-coast tour which brings him to the Roof on Friday.

LOSES VOICE

George Brent lost his voice when he had to smoke ten small and very black cigars during a scene for “Jezebel.”

| them.” | of a $50,000 Beach Pallisades estate.

WEDNESDAY, JAN. 26, 1938

Truce Ends Strike at 9 Theaters

Press Union;

to Join Box Offices Are Reopened.

Agents

NEW YORK, Jan. 26 (U. P).—A temporary truce ended today the two-day box office strike against nine Broadway theaters. Representatives of the Theatrical Managers, Agents and Treasurers Union, the league of New York theaters and the New York theatrical press agents signed an agree=ment under which the press agents will join the union as a semi=

autonomous chapter. They will be required to bargain with producers

| through a union committee, will pay

dues to the union and will be sube ject to its strike calls. | The strike was called in nine | Shubert-controlled theaters after | press agents refused to join the union and announced that they | would form a union of their own to | oppose the managers, agents and | treasurers group. Union ticket sellers were ordered to return to box offices today, and picketing was discontinued.

Suing Wife to Get ‘His Dogs—Maybe

HOLLYWOOD, Jan, 26 (U, P.) == | Mrs, Beverly Martin will receive $600 of her movie scenarist huse band's weekly income of $1000, pending trial of her divorce suit, and also custody of their three dogs —provided she gets a big enough

| yard. This |

stipulation was made in court by attorneys for the wife and

| Francis Martin, the writer, The

here is more freedom of the | court said she might keep their in Germany | three cocker spaniels when “she has

| a suitable place to keep and exercise The dogs now have the run

Mae West Denied Dining Car Permit

HOLLYWOOD, Jan. 26 (U. P.).— Mae West's blond charms did not affect the Los Angeles Planning Commission, The buxom actress wished to set up a dining cer, but the council tied, two to two, over | whether to change zone laws and | jet her do it. A tie vote means re=- | jection.

“PAID TO DANCE” “BRADDOCK-FARR" ————————————————

FRIDAY &

GRACE MOORE § “PLL TAKE ROMANCE” Melvyn Douglas PLUS Jackie Cooper 3 Bf ‘BOY OF THE STREETS’ /

JTonight’s Presentation at Your

Neighborhood Theaters

ANDE

SOUTH SIDE At Fountain Square RS Double Feature Deanna Durbin MEN AND A GIRL” “SATURDAY'S HEROES” Beech Grove GROVE Double Feature Otto Kruger “COUNCIL. FOR CRIME” Marlene Deitrich “ANGEL” Pros. & Churchman AVALON Double Feature Ralph Bellamy “IT CAN'T LAST FOREVER” “BREAKFAST FOR TWO” 1105 §. Meridian IENTAL Double Feature Barbara Stanwyck

OR “BREAKFAST FOR TWO “WINE, WOMEN AND HORSES” LINCOLN “THE BRIDE WORE RE Paul Kelly “PAROLE RACKET” =k a ah. 2103 Shelby New Garfield poi Simin

“PRISONER OF ZENDA" Jones Family “HOT WATER"

NORTH SIDE

Stratfor d TT 10th & Ooilege

Double Feature Preston Foster “YOU CAN'T BEAT LOVE” “SECRET AGENT”

2351 Station St. Double Feature Claude Rains “THEY WON'T FORGET” “ON SUCH A NIGHT”

Tilinois and 34th Double Feature Pat O'Brien

East at Lincoln Double Feature Joan Crawford

“SUBMARINE D-1" “BORROWING TROUBLE” oy ~~ 1500 Roosevelt ouble Feature Holly wood Wallace Ford “SWING IT SAILOR’ ' Brian Aherne “GREAT GARRICK”

Central at Fall Creek ZARING Double Feature Fred Astaire «A DAMSEL IN DISTRESS” “THERE GOES THE GROOM 16th & Delawars Double Feature

CIN EM Deanna Durbin

“THREE SMART G 8 “LIVE, LOVE AND LEARN" Continuous From 1:30

Ei Und and College UPTOWN HO FR rE EADY TaN BACK” —— Ee "GIB FY, Wayne ST. CLAIR idk, "orice

T EVI Greta Garbo “'C NGOEST”

TALBOTT

“A GIRL “MAN WHO COULD

Talbott & 22nd Double Feature Wendy Barrie wi IDEAS” " RK MIRACLES”

Double Feature Jessie Mathews

EX «rURY AND THE WOMAN"

GOLDEN

50h at Northwestern |

NORTH SIDE

ii —— aa. M ECC A Doubie Feature “HIDEAWAY” EAST SIDE A . 2030 E. 10th St PARKER Robt, Armstrong . “HERE'S FLASH CASEY” -— 3155 E. 10th St. RIVOLI A KING Fredric Marck "NOTHING SACRED” TACOMA oi Meroe _ Jean Rogers "REPORTED MISSING” _ 4020 E. New York TUXEDO Pat O'Brien asi Bruce Cabot “BAD GUY” i. 5507 E. Wash. St RV | N G nh Sheriden “THUNDER TRAIL” HAMILTON point oiton Frances Farmer ‘EBB TIDE” E. Wash. AS MARRIED” “WILD MONEY”

Fred Stone MIT'S LOVE AGAIN" Double Feature “THE GIRL SAID NO Doors Open 5:45 “FIT FOR » i? E. Wash. Bb “THE GREAT GARRICK Double Feature “BACK IN CIRCULATION” e Feature “WINE, WOMEN AND HORSES e 2116 E. 10th St. “BETWEEN TWO WOME 6116 Double Feature 0 E. 10th

“AS GOOD Edw. E. Horton

EMERSON

Fred Astair ‘DAMSEL Plus “THERE GOES

STRAND “FIT FOR A K “THERE GOES THE 1 a Imnk= Wallace Ford

Pa ramount Isabel Jewell

“SWING IT SAILOR Comedy—Sport Reel—Novelty Eo 114 E. Washington Double Feature

BI J O U Robt. Wilcox

“ARMORED CAR" RE TRAILS DIVIDE”

CHINATOWN" —No. 10_ WEST SIDE

_THE_GROOM™ __ 1332 E. Wash. St. Double Feature Joe E. Brown ING” GROOM" Wash.

a

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HOWARD Britis Eerare A FINISH" . 10th “MAID OF SALEM “ROLL ALONG COWBOY” D 0 W. Mich. $e DAISY “HOT

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