Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 April 1938 — Page 6
PAGE 6
Eicheverry Makes Hit in Play at Civic ‘Goodbye Again’ Proves
Highly Diverting Light
Farce.
By JAMES THRASHER Allan Scott and George Haight's carefree child of depression days, “Goodbye Again,” is a welcome little five-year-old stranger at the Civic, where it arrived last evening for a six-night stay. Somehow this farce is just now getting around to Indianapolis. But since the amusing and eternal verijes of discreet biology don’t’ date a it is just as funny as it ever was. : The esthetes haven't taken a more delightful spoofing in recent years than they receive in this be-tween-the-lines story of an author, his lecture tour, and the hardy, persistent ghost of a collegiate amour. The authors set a very modest teapot on the fire in Act-l. Kenneth Bixby, novelist, and Anne Rogers, who is—well, I believe the movies once summed it up quaintly in the title, “More Than a Secretary’— anyway, Mr. Bixby and his guide, philesopher, friend and secretary are in the midst of a lecture tour. Mr. Bixby is doing needed penance for a copper mine investment by lecturing en Proust, Freud and others, including himself, and autographing books for his admirers. We find the two established in the Statler Hotel, Cleveland, with nothing more exciting than a broadcast, luncheon and lecture on the horizon, when in walks Julia Wilson.
“Other Selves” Joined
Kenneth has. been undergoing a gradual process of deification in Julia’s mind since, in the spring of their senior year, she had joined ' their “other selves” together. It turns out to be a tough knot. Julia fancies herself the writer's secret sorrow: and constant inspiration. _ She sees herself modeling his novels’ heroines. Kenneth, once he has recognized her, performs as the flattered, unattached male obviously would. They spend an evening talking it over. Meanwhile, Julia's reasonable, stolid young husband arrives in the hotel room to have a look at this demigod. He waits. Later come Julia’s younger sister and her obstreperous, fresh-from-law school fiance. They wait. Eventually Kenneth makes the mistake of coming back. : So the teapot tempest is brewing merrily at the second art curtain. And the play winds itself up, of course, convulses the audience and straightens itself out, as any good farce should. Naturally, such things can be pretty awful under heavy-handes, treatment. And fortunately, “Goodbye Again” trips lightly along with the support of an excellent cast. Passes Acid Test ' When the occasion demands that Civic productions be weighed and valued, one adjusts the scales to a group of unpretentious amateur performers, which is as it should be. But the present work boasts experienced professionals in the leads, so can look to a major-league rating. It really passes the test. One can imagine the lamented + Osgood Perkins, who created the Bixby role, smirking approvingly from a footlighted cloud on Alfred Etcheverry’s performance. For the Civic director, having given himself a double job this time, does it splendidly. We know Mr. Etcheverry is a ca- ' pable director. But in this, his real local debut as an actor, there is occasion for cheers.. The part is as fat as its performer is slender. But there are many moments when the
"actor's technique and comedy sense |
must carry the day. From subtle inflection and movement to broadest farce, the Civic’s boss never falters. It is a performance best described by that indispensable enconium, “swell.” Mary Fletcher, in a home-town interlude of professional stage life, puts that unmistakable professional stamp on her playing of Anne. It’s .. fast, light and up to scratch every minute. Dorothy Jay Robinson, who reached the Civic by way of the London stage, fits as the equally adept third side of the triangle. Logically enough, the other players catch the spirit and outdo themselves. So we have Blayre McCurry, Ned LeFevre, Betty Coons and all the rest bridging the chasm between those who act for fun and the professional performers. . There hasn’t been a funnier play in town this year, not even “The Women,” and it’s good for a hilarious evening.
ANCIENT CAR FOUND
Technicians working on “Men With Wings,” have uncovered a 1913 Marmon automobile used by Barney Oldfield in the Los Angeles-Phoenix road races.
ROR ote R EIT
< HER JUNGLE a3
PETER LORRE IN MR. MOTO’S GAMBLE
¥
HIGH C IN EASTER GREETINGS
The natural way for Deanna Durbin to send an Easter greeting to her fans would be to sing it, which she’s doing here, against an
appropriate background of lilies.
The De Maraise Sisters, acrobatic dancing team, will begin an engagement in the Claypool’s Atrium Cafe tonight.
Featured singer with Frankie Masters’ orchestra at the Indiana Roof tomorrow night will be Marion Frances.
‘WHAT, WHEN, WHERE
APOLLO .
“In Old Chicago,” with Don Ameche, Tyrone’ Power, Alice Faye, Alice Brady, at 11:48, 2:16, 4:44. 7:12 and 9:40.
“March of Time,” at 11:21, 1:49, 4:17, 6:45 and 9:13.
CIRCLE “Her Jungle Love,” with Dorothy Lamour, Ray Milland, at 11, 1:45, 4:30, 7:15 and 10.
“Mr. Moto’s Gamble.” with Peter Lorre; Keye Luke, at 12:30, 3:20. 6:05 and 8:50.
CIVIC
“Goodbye Again,” a comedy with Alfred Etcheverry, Mary Fletcher and Dorothy Robinson. Curtain at 8:30.
INDIANA
“Rebecca.” with Shirley Temple, Randolph Scott. Gloria Stuart, Jack Jie. at 11, 1:51, 4:43. 7:35 and
“This Marriage Business,” with 3 gtor Moore, at 12:41, 3:33, 6:25 and
LOEW'S
“The Adventuress of Marco Polo,” with Gary Cocper. Sigrid Gurie. Basil Ratlibone. at 12:15, 3:20. 6:50 an
“The Gaiety Girls,” with Patricia Ellis. Jack Hulbert, at 11, 2:15. 5:30 and 8:50.
LYRIC
Wayne King and his Orchestra, with other vaudeville, on stage at 12:54, 3:46, 6:48 and 9:40. “Accidents Will Happen." with Ronald Reagan, Gloria Blondell, at 11:38, 2:30, 5:32, 8:34 and 10:45.
OHIO
«13 Hours by Air,” with Fred Mac- . Murray. Joan Bennett. Also “Night Club Scandal.”
ALAMO
“Overland Express,” with Buck Jones. Also “The Duke Comes Back,” with Alan Lane.
AMBASSADOR
“A Yank at Oxford,” with Robert Taylor. Also “Checkers,” with Jane Withers. :
VETERAN VILLAIN
Paul Panzer, one of the original villains of silent films (“Perils of Pauline,” 1914) is on the side of law and order after 24 years of film experience, playing a watchman in “The Amazing Dr. Clitterhouse.”
INDIANAPOLIS
16-18
& MON. APRIL Show Grounds Keystone and Southeastern HAGENBECK - WALLACE
Presenfing—FIRST TIME IN AMERICA
BLACAMAN
HINDU ANIMAL HYPNOTIST COLOSSAL DISPLAYS
of Mammoth Entertainment and Terrific Sensations
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TICKETS ON SALE NO HAAG’S DRUG STORE. CLAYPOOL HOTEL
STARTING AT SATURDAY. MIDNIGHT SHOW!
.BUZZ'N AROUND
With ATT CANDLER
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UNJA
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FEATURING
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GORGEO
AND SINGING AND DANCING
Miss Costello Aiding Father
HOLLYWOOD, April 16 (U. P.). — District Attorney Buron Fitts said today that Dolores Costello, movie actress, and her father, Maurice Costello, had conferred with a member of his staff on the matter of funds for the father’s support. Mr. Fitts said he was taking no action and would make no investigation. Mr. Costello appeared and sought advice from a member of Mr. Fitts’ staff on the legal rights of parenis who receive financial support from their children, the attorney. said. Later the daughter, former wife of actor John Barrymore, conferred with thz District Attorney. “I explained my case fully to Mr. Fitts,” she said. “He told me he was perfectly satisfied that I am doing all that I can to make my father comfortable. I am sorry that this matter has become public.” Miss Costello, since divorcing Mr. Barrymore, has resumed the film career she interrupted to become a housewife and mother of his two children.
M'INTYRE WIDOW VISITS HOLLYWOOD
HOLLYWOOD, April 16 (U. P.).— Will: H. Hays, president of the American Motion Picture Producers Association, was in Hollywood today for his annual spring visit. He arrived with Mrs. Hays and Mrs. O. O. McIntyre, widow of the newspaper columnist, from New York.
LAST TIME TODAY—LOOK! Fred MacMurray ‘13 Hours B Plus! “Night Club Scandal” Sunday—Bing Crosb “Too Much Harmony”
TYRONE POWER ALICE FAYE DON AMECHE
EET
who loses his job through his wife's
Wayne King,
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
AE
Entertaining
Stage Bill Playing Lyric;
Shirley Tops
Pair and King's Choristers Round Out Bill.’
Emerging, along with the crocuses, at the advent of spring, Wayne (Waltz) King and his or-) chestra have come forth from a long broadcast-studio hibernation for a week on the Lyric stage.
Mr. King’s music and his assisting entertainers have join€d forces to produce one of the best of the Lyric’s 1938 shows. Yesterday's opener was the first performance of a six-week tour. But already things are going smoothly. Of course, the dreamy-music specialist has saved several waltzes for his admirers. Among them are “The Blue Danube” and ‘Roses of Picardy.” Then there are such favorites as “I Love You Truly” and “The Rosary,” done in the familiar King manner, with emphasis on the violins and soft clarinets.
Gower and Jeanne Dance
Things proceed in this manner for a few minutes, with. soft blue lights and saxophone solos by the maestro himself. Then the lights come up and the fun begins. First there is the ballroom dancing team of Gower and Jeanne, two youthful and graceful performers who made a decided hit with the inital audience. 1 - Then comes the second ventriloquist in as many weeks, Robert Neller, and his dummy, Dizzy Dugan. Dizzy has Jimmie Cagney’s hair, Clark Gable’s ears, and Charlie McCarthy's voice and brash manners. In fact, Mr. Neller’s performance is quite in the Edgar Bergen manner, which means it’s very good. The ventriloquist whistles a duet with his dummy, which is something of a feat. But the banter is equally amusing, and Mr. King even- has a tryout as the impudent Dizzy’s understudy.
Featured in Recent Movie
There’s more to come, however. Ames and Arno put in an appearance next. They are the hilarious knockabout team featured recently with Bing Crosby in “Double or Nothing.” . \It’s almost impossible to describe all their antics, especially since I missed about the last five minutes of the act because tears of laughter steamed uy my windshield. Really good comedy of the convulsive sort is rare enough that you ought to see Ames and Arno and store up the memory against dark days to come. Maintaining the show's high standard are the King’s Choristers, a mixed vocal ensemble of 10 singers. There’s even the diversion of some loud and fast playing by the King band. Devotees may find it bordering on sacrilege, but it all adds to the enjoyment.
Accident Racket Exposed
Up-to-the-minute Warner Bros. have turned out another timely picture in the Lyric’s new film, “Accidents- Will Happen,” which exposes those who “fake” traffic accidents to collect insurance. Ronald Reagan plays the aduster
connection with the racket. He believed her, yet, being fired, sets out to expose the gang. Assisting him is Joan Blondell’s little sister, Gloria, from the Broadway stage. There is plenty of action and exgitement, with many unsung stuntmen heroes risking their necks for your entertainment. J. T.
Ind
|Ventriloquist, Comedy |Child Star Repeats Her
ana Show
Hit Songs in ‘Rebecca’; Growing Up.
“Suggested by Kate Douglas Wiggin.” > So reads one of the credits on “Rebecca,” now at the Indiana. Just a suggestion of Mrs. Wiggin’s novel, “Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm.” The rest is all Shirley Temple. And that is perhaps as it should be. The movie with the classic’s title tells the story of a youngster abandoned by her stepfather to a gruff but loving aunt in the country. As a last gesture before abandoning her, however, the not-wholly-evil stepfather (William Demarest) had taken her to tryouts for stardom on a radio breakiast fo program. They leave, no owing the tryout was successful. < . : Broadcasts From Farm
The radio executives, however, trace her to the farm and premiere the program from a farmhouse, because of Aunty’s refusal to let her go on the air. With such. a star, the program is of course a success. With this the stepfather determines to get her back to provide support for his robust, theatrical wife (Ruth Gillette). Shirley outwits him—didn’t you know she would? ; The couple that the marvel moppet brings together for a happy ending are her cousin, played by Gloria Stuart, and the breakfast food company’s advertising agent, Randolph Scott, who loses Miss Temple's services. Incidentally, she also brings romance and reconciliation to two other couples. When she fixes up Mr. Scott and Miss Stuart, there is no one left for Mr. Scott’s former sweetheart, Phyllis Brooks, but Jack Haley. If there had been anybody else in the cast, Mr. Haley would doubtless have remained a victim of unrequited love.
Little “Fixer-Upper”
Equally indirect but equally effective is the contribution of the little “fixer-upper” to the lives of her aunt (Helen Westley) and ithe caretaker of the farm rext door (Slim Summerville). They haven't spoken to each other for years, since Mr. Summerville got drunk the night before the. wedding was scheduled. But the spark of love lingers for Miss Temple to kindle. All these—even Miss Temple's dancing partner, Bill Robinson — are only trimmings. Shirley is the show. And a good show it is. She sings a half a dozen songs, most of them delightful ones even without the Temple touch. For an extra surprise she sings a medley of famous Shirley sougs of the past, pleasant memories of when she was a little girl. ; : She is a young lady now. She is even making a proposal of marriage to Mr. Scott. That gentleman, after due consideration of the
GRANADA
Tonite—Tomorrow
PODER
TAYIOR A YANK OXFORD
Lionel BARRYMORE Maureen Vivien
QO SULLIVAN - LEIGH |JITo {i alc) i 4 Midd
The story concerns two amiable? flyers, Ray Milland and Lynn Overman, searching in the southern Pacific for a lost comrade. They run suddenly into one of those unaccountable typhoon-hurricanes that occur so often of late on the screen and are “grounded” with a terrifying crash on the aformentioned island. Sets Are Superb
In no time at all whatever injuries they encountered are cured and they are investigating the surrounding terrain. (Incidentally, the sets, if you can refer to the wide open spaces as “sets,” are superb and the technicolor the most natural we have seen to date.) : Out of the really extraordinary foliage suddenly appears a native girl (Dorothy Lamour) given to throwing knives at strangers. There is some amusing byplay here between the three attempting to make each other understand and Tura’s friends, “Meewa,” a lion cub, and “Gaga,” who is really an inspired chimpanzee. Tura shows Jilhmy and Bob around the island, and friendship ripens. ' “There occurs during these first, idyllic scenes the ominous sound of distant drums, signalling impending disaster, which rapidly ensues.
Enemy of While Men
On a nearby island lives Kuasa, rich, cultivated, and bearing a deep-
seated loathing for white men. His cheerful pursuit in life, it seems, is to feed the white unfortunates to the crocodiles. Such was the fate of the lost aviator, and it isn’t hard to see as the story unfolds that the same fate is possibly in store for our friends. . Sure enough Tura’s Eden is invaded by an evil looking throng whose destination is the dread subterranean “Crocodile Cave.” Only an earthquake at the crucial moment saves the brave little band from a horrible death. The villain of the piece gets his just desserts when he is pinned under a falling idol and devoured by the biggest of all possible crocodiles.
Saved at Crucial Moment
At the end the escaping trio are picked up (at the crucial moment) by a magnificent yacht owned by a dashing fellow who vaguely seems to be the aviators’ boss. The boss has a very incidental daughter who had previously been engaged to the handsome aviator, Mr. Milland. Love triuniphs, however, when ‘Tura in a vastly complicated way turns out to be an English girl who was
time element and the availability of Miss Stuart, turns her down. But
he is flattered by the proposal. Who wouldn’t be? S. E. H.
kidnaped by the wily villain in early youth. Special mention is deserved by Lynne Overman, who plays the older and hardboiled aviator with a 1efreshing vitality and humor. Dorothy (Sarong Sarong) Lamour’s Tura is done with admirable coyness. The pace of the picture is slow, its climaxes inevitable, but the scenery enchanting. Also on the bill is Peter Lorre in “Mr. Moto’s Gamble.” It shows the famed criminologist unravelling a murder with his students. L.O. M.
Bergen Insures His Pal, Charley
HOLLYWOOD, April 16 (U. P.. —The “life” of dummy Charlie McCarthy is insured for $5000, it was revealed today by his master, Edgar Bergen, the ventriloquist. The policy covers Charlie’s loss in an automobile, train or plane accident, a fire, tornado, landslide, theft or kidnaping, or absentminded misplacing by Bergen. Mr. Bergen said that for 11 years he has tried unsuccessfully to obtain an understudy for Charlie Mc-
Carthy. A number of times he has commissioned wood carvers to make replicas of the dummy’s face and paid as. much as $250, but the result was unsatisfactory, he said. Now he is experimenting with a “life mask” of the dummy’s features. Mr. Bergen never permits Charlie to be left too long under the hot lights on the movie stages. He is afraid Charlie’s glue will melt.
JOE BROWN GETS STAGE PLAY OFFER
HOLLYWOOD, April 16 (U. P.)— Joe E. Brown, the large-mouthed comedian, was considering today an offer to go on the stage in Ring Lardner’s baseball play, “Elmer the
Great.” The Cape Playhouse at Cape Cod, Mass., wants him after Mr. Brown completes his next
i, SKY JE, HARBOR
at., 60c counle before 9:30; couule 9:30 to 12:00: 50c couple after 12:00. Sun. 35¢ couple before 9:15 3 50¢ Couple After 9:15 - One Block ‘South Municipal Airport.
Dance
Harold Every & Sun.
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/ America’s / Waltz King
Plus His Own
And His Famous
ORCHESTRA
LYRIC
HOME OWNED—-HOME OPERATED
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SATURDAY, APRIL 16, 1938 DOROTHY LAMOUR AT CIRCLE BASKS IN JUNGLE PARADISE
If you are a fancier of the (apparently) Deserted-Island-Paradise type of efitertainment, then “Her Jungle Love” is your dish! Complete with trick chimpanzees, beauteous maidens in distress and a sinister native potentate with an enviable British accent, the picture opened a week's engagement at the Circle yesterday. ;
Coogan Suit Writ Served
Officers Smash Way Into Bernstein Home.
HOLLYWOOD, April 16 (U. P.).— There were chuckles in Jackie Coogan’s legal camp today and a broken gate in the big fence encircling the mansion of his mother and stepfather whom he is suing over the four million dollars he con= fends he earned as a child movie star.
Ending a game of hide-and-seek that lasted three days, two deputy sheriffs broke open ‘the electrical gate, forced their way into the house and served subpenas in the bedroom of Mrs. Lillian Coogan Bernstein sid her husband, Arthur L. Berne stein. ' ! :
The mother and stepfather are to appear in the offices of Jackie's lawyers Monday ‘to answer questions for a deposition about their handling of the millions. After process servers had been unable to get nearer the Bernsteins than the electrically locked - front gate, Jackie's lawyers obtained a court order for deputy sheriffs to serve the subpenas—by force if necessary. . % The deputies crashed through the gate; and receiving no answer to their doorbell ring, walked in and went upstairs. A woman's voice came from a bedroom. | Who's there?” ‘We're from the Sheriff's office,” the officers said. They were invited inside. Jackie's mother and stepfather accepted the papers.
wth LPH SCOTT RANDOL HALEY
FOR THE Bis ONE '
INDIANAPOLIS 2 DAYS.
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* THE ADVENTURES OF
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At Your Neighborhood Theater
. SOUTH SIDE
A | Ld so RG va on Bob Allen “COURAGE OF THE WEST” Dolores Del Rio “LANCER SPY” Sun. Double Feature—Ritz Bros. < “LIFE BEGINS IN COLLEGE” Jean Parker “THE BARRIER” Oriental "Ss Ses rien a Alice Faye “YOU'RE A SWEETHEART” Audioscopik No. 2 ‘Sun. Double Feature—Dick Powell - “HOLLYWOOD HOTEL” “TARZAN’S REVENGE”
East at Lincoln Double Feature :
Li Nnco | nN Frank Morgan
“BEG, BORROW OR STEAL” “OLD WYOMING TRAIL” Sun. Double Feature—Irene Dunne : “THE AWFUL TRUTH” “CHAN AT MONTE CARLO”
' New Garfield
2203 Shelby St. Fay Wray “Murder in Greenwich Village” “MERRY-GO-ROUND OF 1938” Sun. Double Feature—Dick Powell “HOLLYWOOD HOTEL” “SHE LOVED A FIREMAN”
Fountain Square Double Feature Glenn Morris “TARZAN’S REVENGE” Joan Crawford “MANNEQUIN” Sun. Double Feature—W. C. Fields “BIG BROADCAST OF 1938” “THE KID COMES BACK” Double Feature
Sa nd e rs Mischa Auer
“MERRY-GO-ROUND OF 1938” “THANK YOU, MR. MOTO” ‘Sun. Double Feature—Dorothy ‘Lamoug “Jon Hall “HURRICANE” “PAID TO DANCE”
GROVE om Double Feature : Buck Jones . . “SUDDEN BILL DORN” - Fred Stone “QUICK MONEY” Sun. Double Feature—Wallace Beery “BAD MAN OF BRIMSTONE” “SH! THE OCTOPUS”
: At Fountain Square
: Talbott
NORTH SIDE
EAST SIDE
DRE AM 2351 Station St. Double Feature ! Johnny Downs “THRILL OF A LIFETIME” _ “THE WESTLAND CASE”
Sun. Double Feature—Eleanor Holm
“TARZAN’S REVENGE”
illinois and 34th - Double Feature Henry Fonda
“I MET MY LOVE AGAIN” “TARZAN’S REVENGE” Sun. Double Feature—Robert Taylor “A YANK AT OXFORD” “LOVE IS A HEADACHE”
Hollywood fess:
Double Feature ' Randolph Scott “HIGH, WIDE AND HANDSOME” “SHE LOVED A FIREMAN” Sun. Double Feature—Dick Powell “HOLLYWOOD HOTEL” Ronald Regan “SGT. MURPHY”
Za ri ng Central at Fall Crk.
Double Feature Kent Taylor “THE JURY'S SECRET” “DANGER—LOVE AT WORK” Sun. Special Feature—Charlie McCarthy Ritz Bros.—Kenny Baker
“THE GOLDWYN FOLLIES” News Events :
C . 16th eS Delawste " m 'eatur | n e a piv “Sothern “SHE’S GOT EVERYTHING” Will Rogers “JUDGE PRIEST”
§6n. Double Feature—Glenda Farrell
“BLONDS ‘AT WORK” ‘Dorothy Lamour “HURRICANE” ©nd & Double
: College U ptown Noah Beery Jr. “Some Blondes Are Dangerous” “Murder in Greenwich Village” Sun. Double Feature—George Brent “GOLD IS WHERE YOU FIND IT”
Tacoma
Tuxedo
Feature | N
Pa r ke v 2930 E. 10th St.
Double Feature Bing Crosby “DOUBLE OR NOTHING” “Bulldog Drummond Comes Back” Sun. Double Feature—Dorothy Lamour “THRILL OF A LIFETIME” “TRADER HORN”
RIVOL 3155 _E. 10th St.
Cont. Matinee Today Wayne Morris
Adults 15¢ Till 6 «THE KID COMES BACK” “MIDNIGHT INTRUDER”
EXTRA! Last Show Tonight Only! Box Office Open Until 11 p. m.
Warner Baxter—Myrna Loy Claire Trevor—Ian Hunter
“TO MARY, WITH LOVE”
Starting Tomorrow Robert Taylor —Maureen O’Sullivan
«A YANK AT OXFORD” George Brent—Olivia De Haviland “Gold Is Where You Find It” _. EXTRA! Charlie McCarthy
2442 E. Wash St Double Feature Humphrey Bogart
«SWING YOUR LADY” Smith Ballew “WESTERN GOLD” Sun. Double Feature—Dick Powell “HOLLYWOOD HOTEL” «SH! THE OCTOPUS”
E. New York Double Feature Jack Holt
“TRAPPED BY G-MEN” Sonja Henie “HAPPY LANDING” Sun. Double Feature—Wallace Beery «BAD MAN OF BRIMSTONE” “YOU'RE ONLY YOUNG ONCE”
“ON AGAIN—OFF AGAIN”
St. Clair” Cl. & Ft, Wayne
Double Feature Glenda Farrell “BLONDES AT WORK” “UNDER SUSPICION”. Sun: Double Feature—Wallace Beery “BAD MAN OF BRIMSTONE”. | “CHANGE OF HEART”
IRVING
5507 E. Wash. St. Double Feature Peter Lorre
“THANK YOU, MR. MOTO” . Claudette Colbert “TOVARICH” Sun. Double Feature—Glenda Farrell “BLONDES AT WORK” Sonja Henie “HAPPY LANDING”
Talbott & 22nd Double Feature Boris Karloff “THE INVISIBLE MENACE” Miriam Hopkins “WISE GIRL” Sun Double Feature—Wallace | ,
Hamilton
2116 E. 10th St. Double Feature Humphrey Bogart
“SWING YOUR LADY” “CHANGE OF HEART”
EAST SIDE
4630 E. 10th Emerson gu jie, ‘ Three-Hit Show 1—William Gargan “Some Blondes Are Dangerous” 2—Gloria Stuart “Change of Heart” 3—“BILLBOARD GIRL” Novelty Starts Tomorrow—Adults 15¢ Till 2 p. m, Mickey Roonev-—Franchot Tone
“LOVE IS A HEADACHE” Sonja Henie “HAPPY LANDING” 1332 E. Wash. St. Gala Easter Hits
Strand Sat. thru Mon. Robert Taylor—-Maureen O’Sullivan “A YANK AT OXFORD” George Brent-—Olivia De Haviland “Gold Is Where You Find It” Mickey Mouse—-Old Mill News—Lowell Thomas and Bert Lahr Continuous Matinee Sat. & Sun. Adults 15¢ Until 1 Extra! Late Showings Tonight Box Office Open Until 10:30
P At ara mou J. Barrymore “Bulldog Drummond’s Revenge” “GET ALONG LITTLE DOGIES” Sun. Double Feature—Ben Bernie “LOVE AND HISSES”
Wheeler & Woolsey “High Flyers” Doors Open 1:30 Saturday
WEST SIDE
2540 W. Mich. St. D A | SY Double Feature Boris Karloft «INVISIBLE MENACE” “CALL OF THE ROCKIES” Sun. Double Feature—George Brent “Gold Is Where You Find It” “NO TIME TO MARRY”
Speedway Hm rem A ouble Feature pee way Hugh Herbert “SH! THE OCTOPUS” “NON-STOP NEW YORK” Sun. Double Feature—All-Star Cast Ritz Bros., Charlie McCarthy & Others “GOLDWYN FOLLIES” “TARZAN’S REVENGE”
- Howard & Blaine
Ta. owa re - ' Double Feature
: Chas. Starrett J “OUTLAWS OF THE E” Dick Merrill “ATLANTIC FLIGHT” Sun. Double Feature—Mickey Rooney “YOU'RE ONLY YOUNG ONCE” Wm. Powell “DOUBLE WEDDING”
STATE Bkihs
Double Feature Bob Livingston “Riders of Whistling Skull” “WHEN THIEF MEETS THIEF” + Sun. Double Feature—Ritz Bros. “GOLDWYN LIES” “TARZAN’S REVENGE” nt . Double Feature hy bog Morris
