Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 April 1938 — Page 11
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~TIESDAY, APRIL'S, 1088
braskan iews 517 ilms a Year
Cenhusker Critic Scans 780 Miles of Movies
In Home Town.
OLLYWOOD, April 5 (U. P.).— ey Oldfield, marathon chamof’ the nation at sitting ugh movies, rolled into town on busman’s holiday today to see ore movies—in the making. Young Oldfield, a distant relative the cigar-smoking race driver, ‘doesn’t smoke. rink. He has no time. He’s too busy tching movies. : / His sad plight—or lucky break— { according to how you look at it, revolves about the fact that he's movie critic of /the Nebraska State Journal, published in Lincoln, Neb. This city is famed, among other things, for being the only place in America where every film produced anywhere always is exhibited. Its theaters unreel more pictures by far than New York City—or Hollywood, itself, and Mr. Oldfield sees em all.
And Seats Are Too Hard
“In Lincoln we have four groups of rival exhibitors, fighting among themselves and buying every scrap ' of film they can get,” he said. “The ‘net result is that I figure I've seen 4780 miles of film, enough to stretch from Lincoln to Hawaii, and it isn’t doing my eyes any good and that isn’t all. “The big trouble with the movies,
as I have learned personally, is that their seats aren’t soft enough. You'd
be surprised how you begin to |:
squirm after the fourth milliondollar epic.” : Mr. Oldfield gripped his seat, shed a tear, laughed aloud and long, gazed in wonder—but mostly just sat there trying to keep awake — while 427 pictures flickered before his eyes in 1936. . Lincoln movie competition got hotter in 1937. He saw 517 pictures.
bigger than ever,” he said.” “In Jan.uary I saw 63 movies. In Febru-
ary I saw 44 and in March, before |}
I started for Hollywood, I saw 47. “That just counts the features. I don’t guess I ‘ever will be able to add up how many Mickey Mice, newsreel bathing beauties and travelogs about the land of the llamas I've had to watch.” He said he had discovered that the time to. see a movie is in the morning.
And Then They Get Worse
“Just after you've had your eggs and coffee,” he explained. “Most any picture looks pretty good then. After lunch, the epics get a little dull, and by night a two million dollar production will look, unless you pinch yourself, like a reissue of a Mack Sennett comedy. “The pictures that get my goat are the colossals. I'd rather see a
Neither does he]
“This - year business is booming ;
STILL
A
Samuel Hershey's “Aztec God, Cactus, Virgin and. Birds” is one of the most discussed still lifes in the Hoosier Salon’s second annual exhibit at the William
THEY SING TONIGHT .. ..
Tonight's performance of the Brahms “German Requiem” by the Tabernacle Presbyterian Choir at 8 o'clock will have Richard Strother, baritone (left), J
LEE STUDY 2520000 lin, wins oe swing
H. Block Co. Auditorium. Mr. Hershey is.a Rockport, Mass., artist, and the above work received the Harold Gray Prize for the show's best still life.
Mrs. Frances Wallace Strickland, soprano, and John Bumgardner, baritone, as soloists. The performance will be at the Tabernacle Presbyterian Church.
| THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES Night Scene Is Filmed in Sun's Glare
Other Tricks of Hollywood Trade Include Bogus Breath, Eyes.
Times Special ; ; HOLLYWOQD, April 5—None of the night scenes you've seen on the screen was filmed at night, or even at dusk. They're made under bright lights, or in bright sunshine, and actors are just acting when they go groping around in apparent darkness. ;
Night or dusk or moonlight effects are obtained sometimes by placing a colored glass filter in front of the carnera lens, sometimes by special development of the film after it is exposed. A slate that is held up before the camera, and jerked away again just before the action starts, identifies the scene number, the name of the picture, and whether the scene is a day shot or a night shot, 4
One of these days not only nigh shots but day shots tan be filmed in semi-darkness. That will be the time when the problems of television have been solved and science will know how to amplify light images much as sound now is amplified— not by lenses but by photo-electric cells. Bogus Breath for Actors
From the early days of movies until now, audiences have snickered at the absence of frosty breaths in scenes supposed to be occurring in frigid surroundings. “I,0st Horizon,” if you recall, avoided this error by making many of the snow scenes on a refrigerated sound _| stage built by a Los Angeles ice company. The actors’ breaths were visible then. . But most snow scenes are filmed amid corn-flakes and gypsum Snow, and on stages where temperatures are at least 80 degrees. The Warner picture, “White Banners,” is full of {hese scenes, and it was up to the movie magicians to do something about it. ) A property man named Edward Edwards (no relation to Simone Simon) invented a device that solves the problem. A tiny tank, that smokes, is worn under the piayer’s clothing and is squeezed, bellows-fashion, by the pressure of an arm. A small rubber tube runs up through the collar to the unseen
a tened there with flesh-colored tape. The players are having a hard time learning to simulate the exhalation of frosty vapor at the right times,
Which
ress, was free today of a contract
reads, the clothes she wears.
given two agents the right to dictate the men she sees,
Actress Free of Contract Dictated Her Life
HOLLYWOOD, April 5 (U. P.).—Francine Bordeaux, French act-
which for the last six months has
the books she
The contract, entered into by the®
but the scheme is much more realjstic than no vapor at all.
Red Dot Colors Eye
One of the most difficult visual tricks you could imagine would be the artificial coloring of the iris of a human eye. It’s done, though, if only by reflection. Blue photographs white, or much lighter than it is, anyway. So blue eyes do not register very well, and require tinting. Red is the fastest color and photographs black, or
Studio Suspends Crooner Powell
HOLLYWOOD, April -5 ((U. P) —Dick Powell, crooning film star, today was suspended by Warner Brothers in a dis-
side of the player's chin, and is fas-
IN NEW YORK — By secre ROSS
z
8 8 8
Ethel Barrymore Returns to Broadway as Ma-
triarch in de la Roche's "Whiteoaks of Jalna.’
NEW YORK, April 5—Ethel Barrymore has come back to Broadway as a wrinkled matriarch, 101 years old, in a stage version of Mazo de la
Roche's famed
novel, “Whiteoaks of Jalna.”
This is the saga, the book’s devotees will recall, of a cynical old wom-~
an who avenges herself upon her weak, decadent, grasping, sponging and hypocritical children and grandchildren when she rea them. And gives Miss Barrymore, as a crinkly centenarian, a chance to show what & truly fine actress she is. :
her will to
greedy,
tion as one of the great Ladies of the American stage. That was evident on opening night when a great ovation greeted her first entrance and final exit so long that the action had to be delayed 10 minutes. And the critical reception of her work was no less rapturous fhe next marning, though opinions differed on the play itself. Whether La Barrymore is impervious or not to the press attitude toward herself, she has gone back to her former stand on interviews. She gives but few, after relenting a while last season when she was with the Theater Guild. Then, she was generous to a fault when interviewers came around and spoke benignly about many personal and impersonal things. But the Barrymore temperament has changed again and the rumor goes that she wouldn't come across: with a scrapbook when the publicity department requested it. Explained that Barrymores don't keep any.
Child Whims Cartooned’
“Schoolhouse on the Lot,” another entry in the spring theatrical lists, is a cartoon on another phase of Hollywood life—the chiid wonders who sometimes go by the name of Shirley Temple, Jane Withers, Bobby Breen et al. At the Mercury Pictures Studios, where this story takes place, the child who causes all the trouble gets her pretty tutor fired for no good reason at all and thereupon wreaks havoc upon the firm because (1) the banker who keeps Mercury Pictures solvent fall in love with the tutor, (2) the other banker who supports Mercury Pictures is mistaken for a tramp and is thrown out of the studio on his ear, (3) the director is fed up with the inhuman precocity of his youthful starlet, and quits. Phil Dunning, who produced «Schoolhouse on the Lot,” has gone to town on it, with an excellent cast of players and a little lady ‘named Betty Phil who does a pretty wicked impersonation of Shirley you-know-who. He has paced it swiftly and has timed the laughs so that they fall near one another from the moment the audience. arrives until it is time to go.’ Opinions, nevertheless, were mixed. Some of the boys and girls liked it; some didn’t and there the show rests in an uneven groove which may, un-
fortunately, turn out to be’its grave,
Lonsdale Has Another
American curiosity about the goings-on in aristocratic English drawing rooms, which was heightened by the publicity given to the sophisticated sets in which the then King Edward VIII moved, may be partially—even : if synthetically — satisfied’ by Frederick Lonsdale’s new play, “Once Is Enough.”
There is a comforting familiarity |
about any Lonsdale play. The play-
Not that anyone doubts her posi-¢
goer knows: that - style-built men and svelte; damsels will amble through it. He knows, moreover, that the talk will be as smooth as
silk, the repartee smartly sophisticated—and that the plot will be a ado about nothing. it was no surprise that “Once Is Enough,” the latest Lonsdale sweetmeat, should be like many other Lonsdale tidbits. Ina Claire is in it. And on the stage, there can: be no grander Duchess than Ina herself. Indeed, the Lonsdale tempest brews in the teapot in “Once Is Enough.” The plot rambles on mainly about whether a man ought to be content with one wife or two, considers both sides of the question artfully; the characters wear beautiful clothes, the drawing room is an interior decorator’s dream, and the conversation indicates that everybody on the stage must have attended college. And in the end, naturally, Ina gets her man.
3 ™N Bedlam on Broadway
Perhaps, in your intellectual pursuits, you have come across a book by Dr. Victor Small entitled “I Know 3000 Lunatics,” which was the good doctor's sympathetic expose of the goings-on in a state institution for the insane. Well, Hardie Albright, the actor (and a good one, too) sat down and made a play of Dr. Smalls book and it was put on the other night with great success. In its stage reincarnation, it is known as “All the Living.” It can be briefly described as the dramatization of the difficulties that medicos labor under in havens for the mentally unbalanced. And without malice or rancor it condemns the system of undermanning such refuges so that the responsibility for several thousands of crazed patients must fall upon & handful of scientists. There is a love story in the play, but it is minor and a convenient peg upon which to hang the major theme and no one possibly can object to it. But the actors handle this delicate theme with such tender understanding and fragile care that “All the Living” has been set down as one of the major achievements of the season. ] : Dr. Small came up from Clinton, N. C, incidentally, to attend the premier. A country doctor in that corner of the South, the first thing he did when he arrived here was to look in on “Tobacco Road” and search out restaurants for authentic Southern fried chicken and| cornpone. He is shy in the presence of actors.
OLD-TIME STAGE STAR
Laura Hope Crews, now playing with Bing Crosby, Mary Carlisle and Beatrice Lillie in. “Doctor Rhythm,” is a one-time stage star, having sup-
To Prevail in
Dartmouth Group Concert Set for Tomorrow
At Caleb Mills Hall. (Another Story, Page Six)
program to be presented by the Dartmouth Glee Club at 8:30 p. m. tomorrow in Caleb Mills Hall, Donald E. Cobleigh, the director, is to feature a number of English folk songs and ballads, Negro spirituals and college songs. The concert will be a homecom= ing for two of the club members, Rodney Albright, son of Mr. and Mrs. Chester W. Albright, 5735 N. Pennsylvania St., and William McMurtrie, son of Mr. and Mrs. Uz McMurtrie, 3551 Washington Blvd. Mr. Albright will direct “The Don Khorblyzes,” a parody on the famous Don Cossack Russian Choir. This number was featured on last spring’s tour and ‘proved,so popular that a new version is being offered this season.
The program will include comedy and novelty instrumental numbers as well as more ‘serious matters. Among the former will be a burlesque “dissertation” by George Dana on “Political Whimsies.” Music by Buxtehude, Franck, Hane del and Bach will open the concert, Clem Sandresky, pianist, will play the Brahms Rhapsody-in G Minor,
will be heard.
here is being sponsored jointly by the Indianapolis Junior Auxiliary and the Dartmouth Alumni Association.
At 8:15 p. m. today, Lloyd lett, Vincennes tenor, will give a recital in the Indiana World War Memorial. Assisting soloist will be Miss Helen Von Willer, dramatic soprano. Mr. Mallett’s program includes
cerpts to songs of a more popular nature. His recital is sponsored by the Queen Esther Cheer Group, Riley Hospital Cheer Guild.
2 #8 8 Students of Olive Kiler and the
chestra and violin music at t school tonight. Soloist will be Paul McDowg violinist, a graduate of the Blind School and a former pupil of Miss Kiler. Mr. McDowell has held a scholarship with Herbert Butler, head of the violin department at the America Conservatory, Chicago, for the past two years. He will play the Bruch G Minor Concerto with the orchestra at tonight's concert.
3 Last Days!
informality
Glee Club Bill
Informality will prevail in the |,
after which the lighter selections - "The Dartmouth club’s appearance
Day Nursery
music ranging from operatic ex-
Indiana State School for the Blind will be heard in a concert of or--
TET EM SL Ee wt fEA5
i Fam WX} Noo 2%
ported . Henry Miller. and a great many stars in nearly 100 Broadway vehicles.
good Western any time. By that 1 mean a really good Western and they're getting scarce. The cowboy stars nearly all are crooners these days and you can take my word for it, they’re mostly not so good.” Of all the actor and actresses he has watched in their off moments as well as their good, Mr. Oldfield said he believed that he liked Clark Gable and Myrna Loy best. He also mentioned : those he liked least, but if you want to know more about them, youll have to ask Mr. Oldfield. One of the stars might even take him to a movie. There could be no ‘worse punishment for Mr. Oldfield, the involuntary movie glutton.
“BOYD SIGNS CONTRACT
In celebration of the fourth anniversary of Paramount’s “Hopalong Cassidy” series Producer
agreement over the actor’s role in “The Garden of the Moon.” Mr. Powell complained his role was subordinate to that . of Pat O’Brien and by mutual agreement Mr. Powell was suspended for 12 weeks. John Payne was assigned to the Powell role. Last week Warner Brothers suspended Bette Davis because she did not think her part in “Comet Over Broadway’ was suited to her talents.
actress so that she would do what supposedly leads to a movie career, resulted in her being known as the “cloistered blond.” Rebelling, she went into court, and Judge Thomas C. Gould struck out the objectionable parts of her contract with the two agents, Sara Parsons and Robert Mack. “Under this contract,’ her lawyer said, “Miss Bordeaux's soul is’ not her own. She can go out only with escorts selected for her. She cannot choose her own clothes. She cannot read any books but those the defendants (Miss Parsons and Mr. Mack) permit her to read. They can dictate where and when she may appear in public. She is comipelled to accept a chaperone who supervises her daily activities, even her manner of speech.” i . Judge Gould indicated that such a contract probably was illegal in
nearly black, so when makeup experts are readying an actress with light blue eyes for a scene, they paint a tiny red dot in a corner of each eye. The iris picks up the reflection and is darkened. Bette Davis is one’ who especially requires ' this treatment. et. The movies still insist on making visible a few things which ordinarily could not be seen. SparKling sand is one of them. Real beach sand usually is quite dull, photographically, but movie makers don’t believe it. Whenever sand is hauled to a studio for a scene it is mixed with rock salt. The salt sparkles. : : Another thing the flicker experts can’t believe is the invisibility of gunfire. Modern smokeless powder, exploding from small arms, actually doesn’t register on film. So the studios use cartridges — blanks of
ollywood’s
fashioned black powder so that Busiest Comedian
puffs of smoke can be seen. For night scenes a little magnesium powder is mixed in to provide a flash.
Balcony 30c After 6 P. M.
Mus ic Invention To Be Shown Here
The Tel-A-Tempo, invention of a local musician, Chic Meyers, will have its first local showing this week at the Indiana Roof. The device is said to resemble a small radio receiver, and will enable a band leader to play music in a dancing crowd’s favorite tempo. All he has to do is to watch his patrons, decide at which rhythmic speed they move naturally, and then set his Tel-A-Tempo accordingly. Lou Breeze and his orchestra already have tested out the gadget in broadcasts heard over WLW, Cincinnati.
Eddie Foydr./
12 Hollywood Starlets
Many Others
N SCREEN
NED SPARKS ~ IRVIN S. COBB RAYMOND PAIGE AND ORCHESTRA John Barrymore
“Bulldeg Drummond’: with John nas ban Louise Campbell
Average ‘Extra’ | Earns $17 Week
HOLLYWOOD, April 5 (U. P).— It was revealed today the average Kollywood movie extra girl earns $17
RTA
BALCONY 30¢AFTER 6
“LITTL S
Tonight's Presentation at Your
Harry Sherman has signed a new 2-year contract with William Boyd, star of the popular Western films, . at a figure making Boyd the highest salaried Western screen star.
WHAT, WHEN, WHERE
APOLLO
«Bluebeard’s Eighth Wife,” with Claudette Colbert, Gary Cooper, Ed- . ward Evgreu Horton, at 12:50, 3:55,
7 and 10:05 a “Daugerous to Know,” with Akim amiroff, Anna May Wong, at 11:40, :45, 5:50 and 8:55.
CIRCLE - «Hawaii Calls,” with Bobby Breen, Ned Sparks, at 12:05, 2:35, 5:05, 7:35 and 10. : «Bulldog Drummond’s Peril,” with
John Barrymore, John Howard, Louise Campbell, at 11, 1:30, 4, 6:30.
and 9. INDIANA “jn Old Chicago,” with Tyrone Power, Alice F Don Ameche, :40, 32:10, 4:40,
aye. Alice Brady. at 11 7:10 and 9:40. ; of Time,” at 11:05, 1:35, and 9:10.
“March 4:05, 6:40 - LOEW'S
“The First Hundred Years,” with Robert Montgomery, Virginia Bruce, Warren William, at 12:15, 2:50, 75:20.
3 d :25. “Little Miss Roughneck,” with Edith Fellows, Leo Carrillo, at 11:05, 1:40, 4:10, 6:40 and 9:15.
LYRIC
“Calling All Stars” Barnett. Eddie Foy Jr 1:05, 3:50, 6:45 an
with Vince on stage at
9:40. | ~ “Island in the Sky,” with Gloria Stuart, Michael Whalen, at 11:38, 3:23, 5:18, 8:13 and 10:38.
OHIO
“Submarine D-1,” with Pat O'Brien. Also “Love and Hisses,” with Winchell and Bernie. ALAMO : #A Lawman Is Born,” with Johnny Mack Brown. Also “Invisible Men-
M AMBASSADOR “Radio City Revels,” Burns. Also “Blonds a
IW A s APOLLO NTL agi Coon COLBERT | ZiEd ELVES ENIELLD ER. [EIGHTH WIFE]
[Dangerous to vind = PATRICK - AKIM TAMIROFF
the first place and in any event the “cloistered” provisions expired at the end of a six-months “psychodramatic” training period. The rest of the contract was left in force, and the agents will still guide her film career. Miss Bordeaux is living her own life meanwhile. The actress, known on the New York stage as Nanette Bordeaux, explained: “I do not wish to be an oo-la-la girl; but I ought to be responsible for my_own personal life.”
WRESTLER PLANS - CAREER IN FILMS
HOLLYWOOD, April 5 (U. P.).— Vincent Lopez, several times claimant to the world’s heavyweight wrestling championship, considered retiring from the ring today to enter the movies. j The massive Lopez said a major and an independent studio had made. him offers. He would join Maxie Rosenbloom, former lightheavyweight boxing champion, who plays screen roles regularly between bouts. Bull Montana, another wrestler, is a veteran movie villain. Max Baer and Jack Dempsey had brief screen careers.
PARIS SIDETRACKED
Although Claudette. Colbert is now playing her first visit to Europe in six years, the star won't buy any clothes in Paris. She says she doesn’t want to take the time.
¥Y! LAST S TODAY rien—Wayne M
Pat O’'B : orris “SUBMARINE D-1”
wiatteri ‘Love & Hisses’ rornie
Irene Anderson,
—CHEZ PAREE— Apollo Theater Bldg. DINE & DANCE Finest of Foods * 3 FLOOR SHOWS Featuring . Billy Jolly and His Banjo Blondell Sisters Betty Lou Kohl
STAR'S BROTHER FACES SENTENCE
HOLLYWOOD, April 5 (U. P.).— Capt.- Leopold McLaglen, brother of
screen actor ' Victor McLaglen, will
appear in court today to be granted probation, or sentenced under a conviction of attempted extortion of a Hollywood millionaire, Phillip Chancellor. If denied probation, he faces the possibility of five years imprisonment or $5000 fine, or both. The brothers have been estranged for years.
MOTHERS’ CLUB TO PRESENT PLAY
The Mothers’ Dramatic Club of
School 54 will give a play, “His+
Women Folks,” at 7:45 p. m,, April 7 and 8, in the school auditorium
at E. 10th and Dearborn Sts.
Cast members include Mesdames Eugenia Palmer, Elsie Eberhardt, Margaret Phelps, Betty Linkhart, Christine Bertels,
Oakla Whiteside, Patricia Shideler
and Hazel Cox. Dumm Tonight =wmmD
N Adios 15¢ evening
Gentlemen 20¢ Before 9 E E
AT RIUM CAFg LALA < gueat
Entertainment Dally, ! Sunday and Monday. om 17 P.M tol A M
Peaturing CORTEZ and DIANNE International Dance Stylists Plus
LEONA TRAVIS Acrobatic Dancing
fe
a week.
The figure contrasted with the $10,000 or more a week paid to the
stars.
The $17 figure was ‘announced’
the average for 1937 by the State|Department of Industrial Relations. from
It was based on statistics Central Casting Corp. cleari house for extras.
The average girl or woman exis e yearly wage of a high-priced star,
earned $898 during the year. Claudette Colbert, is. $350,000.
course—especially loaded with old-
as
ng
DIRECT TO YOU—FROM. ITS $2.00 RUNS—AT REGULAR PRICES!
IN OLD
CHICAGO
SIT THE HOME SHOW TODAY 1 state Farzrounis
*. DOORS OPEN 12 NOON
| ApmissiON 40c
BRE
BIRR Bil
1
and found it!
West Indies of its setting.
JE MIS | ROUGHNECK” Il
who sought adventure in \ serial as thrilling
St tiRINR bY
| Beginning Wednesday, April 6, fn |
TACOMA
ISTRAND
| Paramount
i
Neighborhood Theaters.
EAST SIDE
R | Y O L | 8155 E. 10th St. Door Open 5:45 | Spencer Tracy Joan Crawford “MANNEQUIN” Bob Burn ack Oak
0 ge—J ie “RADIO CITY REVELS” EXTRA! 1938 Academy Winner “THE OLD MILL”
2442 E. Wash. St. Family Nite 0c to All “931; HOURS LEAVE” “GIRLS CAN PLAY” \ 4020 E. New York TUXEDO Family Nite 3 10c to All Leo Carille “HOTEL HAYWIRE” Also Selected Shorts \
IRVING J mI E. Wash
uble Feature “THE
Dorothy Lamour HURRICANE” Geo, Arliss “DR. SYN” HH il 2116 E. 10th St. amilton
Melvyn ‘Douria uglas “ILL TAKE ROMANCE” 2 Dorothy Lamour “HURRICANE”
. 6116 E. Wash. GO LDEN Double Feature Warren Hull : | © “A BRIDE FOR HENRY”. Eleanor Powell “ROSALIE” 4630 E. 10th Double Feature
EMERSON Mickey Rooney “YOU'RE ONLY YOUNG ONCE”
First East Side Showin : Dorothy Lamour “HURRICA!
1332 E. Wash. St. Double Feature Sally Eilers “EVERYBODY'S DOING IT Joan Crawford “MANNEQUIN”
¢ 411 E. Wash. James Dunn : Joan Woodbury “LIVING ON. LOVE” Comedy-—“Mysterious _ Pilot”’—Novelty
; g 114 E. Washington B | J (@) U Dauble Feature : § Bo! Livingston “LARCENY ON THE AIR ", WYOMING TRAIL” “RADIO PATROL” No. 5
PARKER
“WOMEN MEN Nelson Eddy “ROSALIE”
WEST SIDE HOWARD “Fishy Ba “BEHIND PRISON
ST A T E Tne Ww os
Noah Beery Jr. | “SOME BLONDES ARE DANGEROUS” Also Selected Shoris
Dorothea
BELMONT
W. Wash. & Belmont Double Feature f Lewis Stone | “YOU'RE ONLY YOUNG ONCE” Joan Crawford “MANNEQUIN” 2340 W. ch. D A | S Y Double Feature “THRILL OF A LIFETIME: “SHE LOVED A FIREMAN” bes To
Speedwa Double ture : f lark | ble !
The Indianapolis Times
Central at Fall Crk. « Do
uble Feature
UPTOWN
IREX
| Stratford
|DREAM Yes
a : 2203 Shelby New Garfield ramiy nite “IN HIS STEPS” “MAN IN BLUE” . ] oN FOUNTAIN SQUARE Double Feature Bob Burns “RADIO CITY REVELS” : Jack Holt “UNDER SUSPICION” At- Fountain Square SANDERS Double Feature dw. Arnold, Jr. “BLAZING BARRIERS” “ROLL ALONG COWBOY” ~ Beech Grove GROVE Double Feature . i Humphrey Bogart “SWING YOUR LADY” “YOU'RE A SWEETHEART” ; i Pros. & Churchm y \ Double Featu AVALON gabie Sontine “ADVENTURE’S END” Marlene Deitrich “ANGEL” { 1105 So. Meridian ORIENTAL "21am ’ 1 Joan Woodbury “CRASHING HOLLYWOOD” Comedy—Novelty : NORT SIDE i 4. Illinois and 34th’ R | T Z ge ouble Feature Ho Sonja Henie “HAPPY LANDING” Phyllis Brooks ‘CITY GIRL” Hollywood . Robt. Armstrong’s “3 LEGIONNAIRES” : “BRILLIANT NIGHT” “THE BUCCANEER “BLONDE TROUBLE™ 16th & Delaware CINEMA = | bouble Feature | ey. “SWING YOUR yy 8 “BORROWING TROUBLE” 42nd & College PI Ce eanette cDon “NAUGHTY MARIETTA” “BLONDES AT WORK” 2 St. Cl. & Ft. Wayne ST CLAIR Double Feature ® Marlene Deitrich “ENIGHT WITHOUT ARMOR” “THE GIRL SAID NO” : Talbott & 22nd TALBOT I Double Feature « Dai OIaY Lamour “SH! THE OCTOPUS” . 30th at North Double Feature Dick Powell “HOLLYWOOD HOTEL” - “TRAPPED BY G-MEN”
| GARRICK Bail
“FIT FOR A Sylvia Sidney “DEAD END” y Noble & Mass, MECCA a ly kame, :
“NATION AF “GOD’S COUNTRY AND
“YOU'RE IN 3 “DANIEL BOONE” 2351 Station
Walker,
19th & Oollege Double . ure AllStar Cast Go THE . "vs
